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  • from the CNN Center.

  • This is CNN 10 and I'm coral.

  • Jesus.

  • Thank you for watching.

  • A major event of World War Two occurred 75 years ago this month.

  • January of 1945 was when Nazi Germany's largest concentration camp was liberated.

  • Auschwitz is located in southern Poland, a country that Germany invaded and occupied starting in 1939.

  • According to Encyclopedia Britannica, Auschwitz was actually three camps, one was a prison, one was for slave labor and one was a death camp.

  • More than 1,100,000 people were killed at Auschwitz.

  • 90% of them were Jews.

  • The advancing Soviet army found and liberated the camp on January 27th.

  • The Nazis had mostly abandoned it by that time, though thousands of prisoners were left behind.

  • Today, Auschwitz Birkenau is a memorial and museum, a ceremony to commemorate the camps.

  • Liberation was held Thursday in Israel, a nation whose population is more than 74% Jewish.

  • Dozens of world leaders and Holocaust survivors gathered in Jerusalem this week for the World Holocaust Forum.

  • In his opening remarks, Israeli President Reuven Rivlin asked them to make sure the Holocaust and the destruction of World War Two would never be repeated.

  • That's a major theme at Yad Vashem, Israel's national Holocaust remembrance site, where Sarah Sidener filed this report.

  • The admission comes from the Book of Isaiah, and it's really a idiom, and the idiot means permanent memorial.

  • This museum cuts into the mountains, and if you look at it, it looks something like a scar in the mountain of Remembrance.

  • And I think that's what the whole question really is in our world.

  • It's a sting in many years afterwards, but we remain with a sort of a scar.

  • It's a bit shocking as you walk in and you see these massive swastikas, I think flags.

  • But again, this is showing you something about what this period is.

  • I mean, you have to.

  • You can't just enter it like you enter a swimming pool slowly, kind of dive into the period where these bricks from Well, this is a recreation of a street called Legend All Street, which was the main artery in the ghetto Warsaw ghetto, the biggest of the ghettos.

  • And these were actual bricks that were used in the streets of Warsaw, along with the tram line that was there What do you want people to feel when they come start walking into the ghetto?

  • We want them to have a small feeling, maybe, of what crowded nous is and when they see the photos around, understand something about the suffering.

  • Because if you see the photos around you, you see tremendous suffering, especially Children.

  • We're talking about people.

  • Knowing their names is important when you see their faces.

  • You understand even war that we're talking about, Not six million.

  • Something's about six million human beings, each with a family with a background, with something about him that's very human.

  • The suitcases were left with names and addresses and information.

  • Again, it's a personal thing.

  • Who doesn't understand traveling with a suitcase, so their heart rendering these things.

  • When you look at the items and you tie them to the story, you don't need to show photographs of atrocities to understand an atrocity.

  • Things were taken from them again, and shoes and shoes okay, shoes look innocuous.

  • What her shoes, but understand who's choose these were and what happened to the owners of these shoes and you begin toe get something about a feeling of amount of quantity, of, of everything that's going on there.

  • You can touch things here.

  • Yes, you can experience things in a different way.

  • What is this?

  • Well, look in the photograph.

  • This is a camp called Flossing Burg, where people were working and hard labor digging out stones and they were filling carts.

  • Right.

  • And this is one of the carts.

  • There are 1000 points of proof, 1000 things that you can experience here to show you a little bit.

  • Just a tad of what life was like.

  • Ultimately, we want people to understand that the whole of cost was caused by people.

  • It wasn't a cosmic event, and it wasn't monsters.

  • It was human beings who were motivated by ideas more than anything else.

  • And they brought about this whole across.

  • Which means we need to understand what those ideas were, what was motivating them, what brought them into this?

  • Because ultimately we want to learn from a whole across from other genocides.

  • How do we go about preventing anything like this from happening to anyone?

  • Anywhere else?

  • Our next story this Friday.

  • The World Health Organization, part of the United Nations, says the Wuhan Corona virus is not yet a public health emergency of international concern.

  • That's an official term the agency uses for extraordinary outbreaks like those of the Ebola or Zika virus is the W.

  • H O says it's continuing to keep a close eye on the Wuhan virus outbreak.

  • Meantime, the U.

  • S Centers for Disease Control is recommending that Americans who don't need to goto Wuhan should avoid the city.

  • And it recommends that anyone who's traveled to China within the past two weeks and has a fever, cough or trouble breathing should immediately get medical care and avoid other people.

  • The disease is named for the city in China, where it was first identified.

  • Wuhan has a population of 11 million, and it's now on partial locked down, with a lot of its transportation shut down.

  • As Chinese officials rushed to try to contain the outbreak, the travel plans of millions have been impacted because the Chinese New Year begins on Saturday, the most important festival in the world's most populated country.

  • Major celebrations in Beijing, 650 miles north of Wuhan, have been canceled, and with suspected cases of the virus popping up in several other countries, large airports are increasing health screenings and quarantine plans Rushed checkout sparked by a 3 a.m. phone call.

  • We headed to the train station as soon as we got word.

  • The city of Wuhan, China, essentially going on lock down.

  • Officials set a deadline for 10 o'clock Thursday morning.

  • All public transportation, including airports, highways and train stations, toe halt service out of the city.

  • A drastic effort to contain this spreading and deadly Corona virus.

  • As we arrived, crowds already lined up for tickets stretching out the door.

  • This gives you an idea of how seriously people are taking this idea toe.

  • Leave Wuhan and get out before public transportation is strictly limited.

  • We've noticed a good number of people rushing to this train station.

  • Interesting to note, this railway station is located just a few blocks away from the seafood market.

  • The epicenter, according to health officials of this virus, that mark it's been shut down for weeks, guarded by security and police without special permission.

  • No one in so as to prevent any potential exposure from getting out passing through rail security.

  • Thermal detectors monitor for possible fevers inside some passengers feeling panicked in such a short time.

  • The number of cases has doubled several times, others feeling it's all been a bit overhyped for me in Boo Han.

  • I haven't felt that kind of tension or panic at all.

  • I think people are okay.

  • People are getting on with eating, drinking and living.

  • But she's leaving nonetheless.

  • And during the Spring Festival, in which families are supposed to be together, some are making the difficult choice to be apart, sending their young Children outside the city limits while they stay to face the unknowns back home.

  • 216 Football's for one game.

  • That's how many are being made by Wilson, the company that's provided Super Bowl football since 1941 in its factory in Ohio.

  • Wilson picks the leather cuts, the leather stamps, the leather stitches up the balls, and then they're laced like shoes and sent to Super Bowl L.

  • Ivy, also known as Super Bowl 54 with 108 of them going to the Chiefs and 108 going to the 40 Niners.

  • So that's the pig skinny on how they're made before the athletes have a ball with how they're played Now, some will get frayed and some will fade or get kicked, dropped or sprayed with Gatorade.

  • But that's the life of a Super Bowl.

  • They lose or win some.

  • The rest is elementary, my dear Wilson.

  • Okay, a number that we hope to see you subscribe and comment at youtube dot com slash CNN 10 Because that's what L P s Oakland High School did from Oakland, California, where Fridays are awesome.

  • I'm Carl is yours.

from the CNN Center.

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アウシュビッツ解放から75年|2020年1月24日 (75 Years Since The Liberation Of Auschwitz | January 24, 2020)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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