Not only humans are under the rubble > A #cat was freed and rescued from the debris of the collapsed business center in #Diyarbakır / #Turkey
#earthquake #TurkeyEarthquake #earthquaketurkey #Animals #pets #animalRescue
Not only humans are under the rubble > A #cat was freed and rescued from the debris of the collapsed business center in #Diyarbakır / #Turkey
#earthquake #TurkeyEarthquake #earthquaketurkey #Animals #pets #animalRescue
31 January 1944 | Árpád Weisz, a Hungarian Jewish football player, and coach, perished in Auschwitz.
He had been deported to the camp in October 1942. His wife Elena, his son Roberto, and his daughter Clara were murdered in a gas chamber right after arrival and selection.
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Listen & share our podcast about sport & sportspeople in Auschwitz: https://anchor.fm/auschwitz-memorial/episodes/On-Auschwitz-11-Sport-and-sportspeople-in-Auschwitz-e19hmok
#Auschwitz #Holocaust #Shoah #football #history #sports #Hungary #ww2 #war #remember #memory #podcast #education
The term "sport" in KL Auschwitz was distorted by using it to refer to the exhausting exercises combined with the drill and singing applied on a mass scale. This form of sport, referred to after the war as pseudo-sport, was usually a way of enforcing discipline and punishing prisoners. However, among people deported by the Germans to Auschwitz, there were pre-war sportsmen and sportswomen: Olympians and national champions. Some prisoners had also the opportunity to practice some sports in the camp. These included wrestling and boxing, as well as games such as soccer, volleyball, and basketball. Mind sports were also popular among prisoners, particularly chess, but also card games. Renata Koszyk, an educator at the Auschwitz Memorial and curator of the exhibition dedicated to this topic, talks about sport and sportspeople in Auschwitz.
@Swede1952 most of the ones in my city are like exactly yours, with a green-blue band and a red dash - they've found a hub at the local Lidl in my immediate neighborhood and there's also a mating season!
(The ones we had in Paris, who had possibly the most loud mating season- worst than cats'-, had a white band instead)
On this day in 1945, Auschwitz was liberated. Today, the world marks International #HolocaustRemembranceDay.
We can say “never again” all we want, but only constant effort to defend universal human rights has a chance of making that ambition a reality.