This wonderful story is about German soldier


 This wonderful story is about German soldier Willy Georg who worked as a spy camera man. He photographed inside the Warsaw Ghetto in the summer of 1941. He was aware that his life would be imperiled if he did, and yet felt it was worth taking risks to get the truth on record.

The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest Nazi prison for Jews: it was established in October 1940. To put it briefly, they forced around 400,000 people, a large number of people, into a small section of the city. That meant horrible overcrowding, sickness and starvation.


Georg sneaked in with his small Leica camera and 4 reels of film. His pictures depict the horrific everyday life of those who were starving to death. They are particularly valuable because they were photographed early on, before the large deportations had begun. He was found and captured by a German patrol who confiscated his camera, but Georg maintained three rolls of exposed films which served as this valuable evidence.


And by the following April, 1943, the last of the Jews fought back in the famous Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Some would rather die with honor in battle and dignity than be sent to die silently in the Treblinka death camp. Finally, the Germans burned down the Ghetto to bombard the resistance.


Willy Georg's preserved film rolls provide a rare and painful look into the life of those who represented this immense tragedy and reflected their own existence within it. They insure that the world will never forget what happened

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