Forgotten Transports to Poland

Verzio FF submission This is the last of four films in the Forgotten Transports cycle of documentaries by director Lukas Pribyl. It deals with lesser known concentration, labour and extermination camps in what is now Poland. The intricate stories of several men and women from the Czech Republic take...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Pribyl, Lukas
Institution:Open Society Archives at Central European University
Language:Czech
Published: Czech Republic 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10891/osa:7cf2a63b-5356-4444-b587-c651e91f7ac1
Description
Summary:Verzio FF submission This is the last of four films in the Forgotten Transports cycle of documentaries by director Lukas Pribyl. It deals with lesser known concentration, labour and extermination camps in what is now Poland. The intricate stories of several men and women from the Czech Republic take us to ghettoes and camps in Lublin, Zamosc, Piaski, Sobibor and Sawin. In this instance, the tales of these Jewish heroes and heroines mostly recount stories of escape and concealment from the Nazis in Hungary and today's Poland. This adds a new dimension to the story of the Holocaust, which is augmented by the active resistance of captive and brutally treated Jews. They took various routes to freedom, ranging from an uprising in the Sobibor camp to dangerously pretending to be a deaf-and-dumb simpleton who could prove his apparent non-Jewishness with an uncircumcised penis. This last documentary about forgotten transports to the east makes extensive use of archive materials and paints a surprising portrait of the Holocaust, which reshapes the somewhat one-sided view of life and survival of the Jewish population during the Second World War. Consequently, the dichotomy of passive victims and active aggressors gradually dissolves…
Published:2008