File:Interview William J Lowenberg 1993 - KZ Außenlager Kaufering Landsberg - subcamp Dachau 1944 1945.webm

Aus Wikimedia Commons, dem freien Medienarchiv
Zur Navigation springen Zur Suche springen

Interview_William_J_Lowenberg_1993_-_KZ_Außenlager_Kaufering_Landsberg_-_subcamp_Dachau_1944_1945.webm(WebM-Audio-/Video-Datei, VP9/Opus, Länge: 15 min 48 s, 320×240 Pixel, 1,11 Mbps insgesamt, Dateigröße: 125,01 MB)

Bildtexte

Kurzbeschreibungen

Ergänze eine einzeilige Erklärung, was diese Datei darstellt.
Interview William J Lowenberg 1993 - KZ Außenlager Kaufering Landsberg - subcamp Dachau 1944 1945

Beschreibung[Bearbeiten]

Beschreibung
English: Interview 1993, 15 min / Kaufering: Part 3/5: 01:43:33–01:56:09 /

Kaufering subcamp system, subcamps I – Landsberg, II – Igling, III – Kaufering, IV – Hurlach, VII – Erpfting or XI – Stadtwaldhof/Landsberg. William J. Lowenberg on his transport to Kaufering, camp structure and size, earth huts, building bunkers, mass graves, suicides, unimaginable hunger, electric fence, typhus, cold, escape attempts, mistreatment, women's camps, work, forced prostitution, "Thank you" , Trust, death march towards Dachau, to subcamp Munich-Allach, massacre, liberation by the US Army, tattooed concentration camp number. Series A) Tape 1: Part 1/5, B) 2. Part 4/5, C) Tape 2: Part 2/5, D) 2. Part 5/5, E) Tape 3: Part 3/5 / Oral history interview with William J. Lowenberg / Oral History / RG Number: RG-50.030.0139 / William J. Lowenberg, born on August 14, 1926 in Ochtrup, Germany, describes his family; moving to Borculo, Netherlands in 1936 because of the antisemitism his family was experiencing; attending school and working as a delivery boy for his father’s new store; his family’s arrest in 1940 and their deportation to Westerbork, where he performed forced labor in a metal shop; his family’s transport in 1943 to Birkenau, where his parents and sister died; his transfer to Warsaw, Poland, where he worked with a unit responsible for demolishing buildings in the former ghetto after saving whatever could be re-used by the German Army; remaining in Warsaw until late 1944, when he was taken to Dachau; going through the sub-camps of Dachau until he was sent on a death march, where Allied forces liberated him in April 1945; and returning to the Netherlands after his liberation. / Interviewee William J. Lowenberg / Interviewer Joan Ringelheim / Date interview: 1993 January 28 / Geography creation: Washington (D.C.) / Language English / Genre/Form Oral histories. / Extent 5 videocasettes (Betacam SP) : sound, color ; 1/2 in.. / Credit Line United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection / Special Collection The Jeff and Toby Herr Oral History Archive / Topical Term Antisemitism--Germany. / Death marches--Germany. / Jews--Germany--Ochtrup. / World War, 1939-1945--Concentration camps--Liberation--Germany. / Men--Personal narratives. / Geographic Name / Personal Name Lowenberg, William J., 1926- / Corporate Name Dachau (Concentration camp) / Holder of Originals United States Holocaust Memorial Museum / Legal Status Permanent Collection / Provenance Joan Ringelheim, on behalf of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Oral History Branch, conducted the oral history interview with William J. Lowenberg on January 28, 1993 in Washington, DC. /

Rights and Restrictions Conditions on Access No restrictions on access / Conditions on Use No restrictions on use / Record last modified: 2021-05-21 10:23:39
Deutsch: William J. Lowenberg über seine Fahrt nach Kaufering, Lagerstruktur und -größe, Erdhütten, Bunkerbau, Massengräber, Suizide, unvorstellbarer Hunger, Eletrozaun, Typhus, Kälte, Fluchtversuche, Mißhandlungen, Frauen-Lager, Arbeit, Zwangs-Prostitution, „Danke schön“, Vertrauen, Todesmarsch Richtung Dachau, nach KZ-Außenlager München-Allach]], Massaker, Befreiung durch US-Armee, Tätowierte KZ-Nummer (Interview 1993, 15 min) Kaufering: Part 3/5: 01:43:33–01:56:09 /

KZ-Außenlager Kaufering I – Landsberg, II – Igling, III – Kaufering, IV – Hurlach, VII – Erpfting oder XI – Stadtwaldhof/Landsberg. Reihenfolge: A) Tape 1: Part 1/5, B) 2. Part 4/5, C) Tape 2: Part 2/5, D) 2. Part 5/5, E) Tape 3: Part 3/5 / Oral history interview with William J. Lowenberg / Oral History / RG Number: RG-50.030.0139 / William J. Lowenberg, born on August 14, 1926 in Ochtrup, Germany, describes his family; moving to Borculo, Netherlands in 1936 because of the antisemitism his family was experiencing; attending school and working as a delivery boy for his father’s new store; his family’s arrest in 1940 and their deportation to Westerbork, where he performed forced labor in a metal shop; his family’s transport in 1943 to Birkenau, where his parents and sister died; his transfer to Warsaw, Poland, where he worked with a unit responsible for demolishing buildings in the former ghetto after saving whatever could be re-used by the German Army; remaining in Warsaw until late 1944, when he was taken to Dachau; going through the sub-camps of Dachau until he was sent on a death march, where Allied forces liberated him in April 1945; and returning to the Netherlands after his liberation. / Interviewee William J. Lowenberg / Interviewer Joan Ringelheim / Date interview: 1993 January 28 / Geography creation: Washington (D.C.) / Language English / Genre/Form Oral histories. / Extent 5 videocasettes (Betacam SP) : sound, color ; 1/2 in.. / Credit Line United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection / Special Collection The Jeff and Toby Herr Oral History Archive / Topical Term Antisemitism--Germany. / Death marches--Germany. / Jews--Germany--Ochtrup. / World War, 1939-1945--Concentration camps--Liberation--Germany. / Men--Personal narratives. / Geographic Name / Personal Name Lowenberg, William J., 1926- / Corporate Name Dachau (Concentration camp) / Holder of Originals United States Holocaust Memorial Museum / Legal Status Permanent Collection / Provenance Joan Ringelheim, on behalf of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Oral History Branch, conducted the oral history interview with William J. Lowenberg on January 28, 1993 in Washington, DC. /

Rights and Restrictions Conditions on Access No restrictions on access / Conditions on Use No restrictions on use / Record last modified: 2021-05-21 10:23:39
Datum
Quelle https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn504633
Urheber Joan Ringelheim (Interviewer)

Lizenz[Bearbeiten]

Creative Commons CC-Zero Diese Datei wird unter der Creative-Commons-Lizenz „CC0 1.0 Verzicht auf das Copyright“ zur Verfügung gestellt.
Die Person, die das Werk mit diesem Dokument verbunden hat, übergibt dieses weltweit der Gemeinfreiheit, indem sie alle Urheberrechte und damit verbundenen weiteren Rechte – im Rahmen der jeweils geltenden gesetzlichen Bestimmungen – aufgibt. Das Werk kann – selbst für kommerzielle Zwecke – kopiert, modifiziert und weiterverteilt werden, ohne hierfür um Erlaubnis bitten zu müssen.

Dateiversionen

Klicke auf einen Zeitpunkt, um diese Version zu laden.

Version vomVorschaubildMaßeBenutzerKommentar
aktuell23:24, 19. Sep. 202115 min 48 s, 320 × 240 (125,01 MB)Treck08 (Diskussion | Beiträge)Uploaded a work by Joan Ringelheim (Interviewer) from https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn504633 with UploadWizard

Keine Seiten verwenden diese Datei.

Transkodierungstatus

Transkodierungstatus aktualisieren
Format Bitrate Herunterladen Status Kodierungszeit
VP9 240P 213 kbps Abgeschlossen um 23:36, 19. Sep. 2021 12 min 21 s
Streaming 240p (VP9) 113 kbps Abgeschlossen um 02:47, 6. Dez. 2023 2,0 s
WebM 360P 537 kbps Abgeschlossen um 15:51, 30. Nov. 2023 2 min 47 s
Streaming 144p (MJPEG) 1 Mbps Abgeschlossen um 19:44, 15. Nov. 2023 21 s
Stereo (Opus) 99 kbps Abgeschlossen um 14:56, 24. Nov. 2023 24 s
Stereo (MP3) 128 kbps Abgeschlossen um 12:02, 10. Nov. 2023 34 s

Globale Dateiverwendung

Die nachfolgenden anderen Wikis verwenden diese Datei:

Metadaten