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Delia 2022-07-06 23:25:04
Fighting for the freedom of life is great
Escape from Sobibor: First of all this is a real 1944 World War II history. It took place in Poland, one of the three concentration camps in Sobibor. The horrific crime of genocide was carried out inside. The film remains a written record of the horrors witnessed by survivors. Like most films about...
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Eddie 2022-07-06 19:56:22
Fragments of memories
I saw this film a long time ago. I was very young at the time, but I have always remembered a few scenes and clips in my memory!
I have always remembered and impressed the most that all the people lined up naked and waited to be burned to death, and a little boy escaped and was beaten to death...
I...

Patti Love
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Samuel: We talk about escape all the time and we do nothing. Maybe it's true. Maybe there is no chance.
Leon Feldhendler: No. I still think there is a way. Just not like this. There has to be organization. There has to be patience and some new people who's spirits have not yet been broken.
Samuel: Yes. I want a chance to escape. To be free or at least a chance to die trying.
Leon Feldhendler: Better to escape and live. That would be real revenge.
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Leon Feldhendler: When you saw your wife and child at the train station last, who were they with?
Itzhak Lichtman: They were with all the other women and children, going to the shower.
Leon Feldhendler: Are you sure?
Itzhak Lichtman: Yes.
[Leon remains silent for a long moment]
Itzhak Lichtman: What is it?
Leon Feldhendler: Itzhak, listen to me. This is a death camp. Every day a train comes. All the people, everyone who goes to the showers, is dead. Men, women, children, everyone.
Itzhak Lichtman: Oh, god!
[breaks down]
Itzhak Lichtman: Oh, no!
Leon Feldhendler: Itzhak, the fire...
[indicates a fire in the distance]
Leon Feldhendler: The fire is their funeral.
Itzhak Lichtman: Oh, god!
[weeping]
Itzhak Lichtman: They were my life!