Como o caso do criminoso nazista foi trazido novamente a público recentemente, em matéria da FSP, encontrei em meus arquivos um antigo artigo do então estudioso das relações internacionais, depois chanceler, Celso Lafer.
Artigo publicado no Jornal da Tarde (SP), 3/07/1978.
Transcrevo uma versão em jpg, acredito que lisível, aumentada...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Temas de relações internacionais, de política externa e de diplomacia brasileira, com ênfase em políticas econômicas, viagens, livros e cultura em geral. Um quilombo de resistência intelectual em defesa da racionalidade, da inteligência e das liberdades democráticas. Ver também minha página: www.pralmeida.net (em construção).
Mostrando postagens com marcador criminosos nazistas. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador criminosos nazistas. Mostrar todas as postagens
quarta-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2019
domingo, 9 de fevereiro de 2014
O castelo da "Branca de Neve": onde os nazistas escondiam as obras de arte roubadas...
Photo by De Agostini/Getty ,DEA / M.SANTINI
TRAVEL
02.08.14
Where the Nazis Hid Their Art: The Castle Behind ‘Monuments Men’
Built by a mad king and copied by Disney, Neuschwanstein Castle held Hitler’s stash of priceless artworks—until the true-life Monuments Men liberated the stolen collection.
High in the Bavarian Alps, a white castle with soaring turrets overlays a scene of rolling green meadows and snow-capped mountains straight out of a storybook watercolor. The setting is so idyllic it served as Walt Disney’s inspiration for Sleeping Beauty’s castle.
What began as a brain trust of the art world’s finest during the war became an group of 345 men and women from 13 countries that comprised the Monuments, Fine Arts and Archives Section unit. They spent 1945 seeking out more than 1,000 troves containing an estimated 5 million pieces of artwork and cultural items stolen from wealthy Jews, museums, universities, and religious institutions. And for six years after the surrender, a smaller group of about 60 Monuments Men continued scouring Europe as art detectives. Now, on Friday, and more than 70 years after the recovery began, a George Clooney-directed movie documenting their cultural reconnaissance opened in theaters with an all-star cast.But the world-famous Neuschwanstein Castle, nearly straddling the German-Austrian border, once played host to something more sinister than the fairytale setting it inspired. During World War II, the Nazis, aiming to amass a world-class art collection for Hitler’s dream of a “Führermuseum,” stashed thousands of paintings inside the castle. When the war ended, it also closed a 12-year period now recognized as history’s largest art heist—raking in priceless masterpieces from the likes of Michelangelo, da Vinci and Vermeer—and the recovery efforts were tasked to an allied unit known as the Monuments Men.
When Paris was liberated, the real-life Monuments Men were directed to Germany’s Neuschwanstein Castle by French museum employee Rose Valland (played in the film by Cate Blanchett), who, unbeknownst to the Nazis using her Jeu de Paume museum as a headquarters, spoke German and had tracked the outgoing shipments of pillaged art. There, over the course of six weeks, they triumphantly recovered some 21,000 stolen collectors’ items. Auguste Rodin’s bronze sculpture The Burghers of Calais was found in the woods nearby, abandoned by its Nazi caretakers.
Learn the real story behind ‘Monuments Men’ in this episode of ‘Reel Numbers.’
Also found in the castle were 39 leather-bound photograph albums documenting looted items. These books, some of which had been presented to Hitler for his birthday, were used as evidence at the Nuremberg Trials. Though many were lost in the aftermath, two were recently rediscovered by the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art and donated to the National Archives.
The Romanesque-styled Neuschwanstein sits propped on the Bavarian countryside in a stately pose. It was built for “Mad” King Ludwig II, who announced construction of the castle in a letter to his confidant Richard Wagner. “It is my intention to rebuild the old castle ruin of Hohenschwangau near the Pöllat Gorge in the authentic style of the old German knights’ castles, and I must confess to you that I am looking forward very much to living there one day,” he wrote in 1864. “[Y]ou know the revered guest I would like to accommodate there; the location is one of the most beautiful to be found, holy and unapproachable, a worthy temple for the divine friend who has brought salvation and true blessing to the world.”
Ludwig was known as an eccentric, and he furthered this image by closing his palaces to visitors and retreating into the mountains, preferring to sleep by day and work at night.
It took 20 more years for Ludwig to actually move into the still-unfinished complex. The king had a predilection for the Middle Ages and decorated the walls of Neuschwanstein in homage to the medieval scenes that were inspiration for Wagner’s operas. Ludwig was known as an eccentric, and he furthered this image by closing his palaces to visitors and retreating into the mountains, preferring to sleep by day and work at night. Neuschwanstein, built to be his mountain retreat, featured state-of-the-art technology, including flushing toilets, electric bells to summon servants, and even telephones despite its outwardly throwback design.
Two years after his move into the new castle, and 22 years into reign as king, Ludwig was declared insane, deposed by the government, and arrested at the castle. Three days later, both he and the psychiatrist who’d evaluated him were found dead in Lake Starnberg in what was called suicide. The mysterious circumstances surrounding his death persist today—historians have long called for Ludwig’s descendants, the House of Wittelsbach, to allow his body to be exhumed and examined, even as recently as 2007.
Almost two months after his death, Neuschwanstein was opened for visitors, and today it’s become one of the most popular royal destinations in Europe, attracting 1.4 million people annually.
It’s lucky for the camera-welding tourists snapping pictures of Ludwig’s fairytale castle that the Monuments Men descended on the looted treasures before the Nazis’ final art solution came into play: The flailing Reich had plans to destroy its caches of priceless art as allied forces approached.
quarta-feira, 19 de janeiro de 2011
As licoes de Nuremberg, para um publico de hoje
Este extraordinário documentário deveria ser disponibilizado em vários sites e arquivos de audio, se possível com legendas em várias línguas, na medida em que se trata de uma incontornável lição de História.
Ver alguns vídeos no YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlS60RG9j0o&feature=player_embedded
Paulo Roberto de Almeida
SPECIAL SCREENING OF "NUREMBERG: ITS LESSONS FOR TODAY"
Wilson Center bullettin (18/01/2011)
You are invited to a special screening of an historic and powerful documentary that was made more than 60 years ago but until recently was not shown in the United States. The screening will be held on Monday, January 31, at 6 p.m. at The George Washington University under the auspices of the University’s Provost, Steven Lerman. It will be introduced by one of its producers and followed by a panel discussion that will include faculty experts from GW.
"Nuremberg: Its Lessons for Today" was made shortly after World War II for the U.S. War Department and the U.S. military government in Berlin. The producer, Stuart Schulberg, included footage used by the U.S. prosecutors at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg to support their indictments of Nazi leaders as well as footage of the trial itself. The film is not only riveting; it’s also a compelling piece of history. It documents the consequences of Nazi Germany’s unprecedented assaults on Europe and humanity; its attempt to murder all the Jews it could find as well as other civilians; and the ways in which the Allies dealt legally with German officials after the war. The film was shown to German audiences in 1948-49 as part of the Allies’ de-Nazification program. It’s significant that, during the late 1940s, U.S. authorities did not permit the film’s release in the U.S.. This prompted a Washington Post reporter at the time to note that "there are those in authority in the United States who feel that Americans are so simple that they can hate only one enemy at a time. Forget the Nazis, they advise, and concentrate on the Reds.”
Read an excellent, informative review of the film at The Washington Post. (transcrevo abaixo)
The film will be introduced by Sandra Schulberg—the daughter of the film’s producer—who, with Josh Waletzky, restored the original film. The panel discussion will include Provost Lerman as well as GW faculty experts on international law, human rights, the Holocaust and education, and will be followed by questions and comments by the audience.
This event is co-sponsored by GW’s Law School, Elliott School of International Affairs, Honors Program, Graduate School of Education and Human Development, Judaic Studies Program, Gelman Library and Rabin Chair Forum, as well as by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
"Nuremberg: Its Lessons for Today"
Monday, January 31, 6 p.m.
Funger Hall, Room 103
2201 G St. NW
Washington, DC 20052
For inquiries please contact Christopher Diaz
=============
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre)
By Ann Hornaday
The Washington Post, Friday, October 8, 2010
More than 60 years after it was made, "Nuremberg: Its Lesson for Today" arrives in American theaters as something of a minor miracle.
In 1945, the U.S. prosecutors at the International Military Tribunal made two revolutionary decisions: They commissioned Stuart Schulberg, a filmmaker with the OSS Field Photographic Branch, to create documentaries about Nazi history and atrocities that would be used as evidence in the trial of Nazi war criminals in Nuremberg. And they announced that they wanted the trial itself to be filmed as a document of a new form of transitional justice.
The resulting work was shown in Germany in 1948 and 1949 as part of the greater de-Nazification program. But it was withheld from American audiences (for reasons that have never been clear) until now.
"Nuremberg," a meticulous restoration by Schulberg's daughter Sandra and Josh Waletzky, faithfully preserves the original 1948 documentary, adding new subtitles and a narration by Liev Schreiber.
The intervening decades make the film's messages all the more potent -- and not only in its depiction of how economic insecurity, intolerance and demagoguery can be used to manipulate the most depraved forces of a civilized society. "Nuremberg" also stands as a fascinating record of a nascent international court system, the wages of aggressive war and a country's tentative steps toward coming to grips with its history.
Schulberg's father made "Nuremberg" for the U.S. War Department and the U.S. military government in Berlin, using footage he and his screenwriter brother Budd gathered for the two evidentiary films Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson requested: a four-hour documentary on the history of Nazism and a one-hour documentary about the concentration camps. Schulberg also had access to 25 hours of the trial itself, which lasted nearly a year. Cobbling together the Nazis' own propaganda footage (some of it shot by Leni Riefenstahl), some postwar footage he himself filmed and the trial testimony, Schulberg created a fascinating collage, juxtaposing the bitter truths of the war -- its lies and cruelties and mass murders -- with scenes of its most notorious architects being confronted about their roles.
It's a tawdry, dispiriting tableau. Viewers will be familiar with some of the most distressing images in "Nuremberg," but Schulberg and his team managed to uncover their own fresh hells, such as a film depicting an early gas chamber, using a car with a long exhaust pipe leading into a small cabin. At the trial, the accused war criminals -- 22 in all, including Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Joachim von Ribbentrop and Albert Speer -- looked alternately bored and disgusted, shielding their eyes from the movie lights with dark sunglasses.
Because "Nuremberg" was aimed primarily at German audiences, some references to German history and institutions will be lost on contemporary American audiences. But the specificity of its mission adds to the allure of a film that possesses a riveting brand of rough, raw immediacy. Seen alongside the equally extraordinary "A Film Unfinished," with its Nazi footage of the Warsaw ghetto, "Nuremberg" provides yet another mesmerizing lesson in how even the most cynical propaganda can be recast in the service of truth. And with terms like "war crimes," "military tribunals" and the "Nuremberg principles" now part of a sometimes overheated political vernacular, this heroically preserved film offers a sobering lesson in where and why many of those ideas were first conceived. The "today" of its original title may be been meant for a different generation, but "Nuremberg" couldn't be more of the moment.
Contains disturbing images of the Holocaust and World War II. In English, French, Russian and German with English subtitles.
========
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Nürnberg und seine Lehre (1946) - IMDb - [ Traduzir esta página ]
Classificação: 6.4/10 - de 12 usuários
Dirigido p/ Pare Lorentz. Estrelando Francis Biddle, Karl Dönitz, Hans Frank. The trial established the "Nuremberg principles" -- the foundation for all subsequent trials for crimes against ... Department's Civil Affairs Division, it was written & directed by Stuart Schulberg, who completed it in 1948. ... Nürnberg und seine Lehre -- Trailer for the 2009 Restoration of Nuremberg: Its Lesson ...
www.imdb.com/title/tt0441889/ - Em cache - Similares
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Description: Trailer for the 2009 Restoration of Nuremberg: Its Lesson for ...
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Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre ... - [ Traduzir esta página ]
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) ... As documented in the film, the trial established the "Nuremberg principles," laying the ...
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"Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today" shows how the four allied prosecution teams from the United States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union built ...
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Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) info, trailers, and showtime information fast and easy.
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16 Jan 2011 ... Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) Directed By: Pare Lorentz Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/1900. Run Time: 01:18 ...
www.tulsaworld.com/scene/moviesdetail.aspx?movieid... - Em cache
Ver alguns vídeos no YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlS60RG9j0o&feature=player_embedded
Paulo Roberto de Almeida
SPECIAL SCREENING OF "NUREMBERG: ITS LESSONS FOR TODAY"
Wilson Center bullettin (18/01/2011)
You are invited to a special screening of an historic and powerful documentary that was made more than 60 years ago but until recently was not shown in the United States. The screening will be held on Monday, January 31, at 6 p.m. at The George Washington University under the auspices of the University’s Provost, Steven Lerman. It will be introduced by one of its producers and followed by a panel discussion that will include faculty experts from GW.
"Nuremberg: Its Lessons for Today" was made shortly after World War II for the U.S. War Department and the U.S. military government in Berlin. The producer, Stuart Schulberg, included footage used by the U.S. prosecutors at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg to support their indictments of Nazi leaders as well as footage of the trial itself. The film is not only riveting; it’s also a compelling piece of history. It documents the consequences of Nazi Germany’s unprecedented assaults on Europe and humanity; its attempt to murder all the Jews it could find as well as other civilians; and the ways in which the Allies dealt legally with German officials after the war. The film was shown to German audiences in 1948-49 as part of the Allies’ de-Nazification program. It’s significant that, during the late 1940s, U.S. authorities did not permit the film’s release in the U.S.. This prompted a Washington Post reporter at the time to note that "there are those in authority in the United States who feel that Americans are so simple that they can hate only one enemy at a time. Forget the Nazis, they advise, and concentrate on the Reds.”
Read an excellent, informative review of the film at The Washington Post. (transcrevo abaixo)
The film will be introduced by Sandra Schulberg—the daughter of the film’s producer—who, with Josh Waletzky, restored the original film. The panel discussion will include Provost Lerman as well as GW faculty experts on international law, human rights, the Holocaust and education, and will be followed by questions and comments by the audience.
This event is co-sponsored by GW’s Law School, Elliott School of International Affairs, Honors Program, Graduate School of Education and Human Development, Judaic Studies Program, Gelman Library and Rabin Chair Forum, as well as by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
"Nuremberg: Its Lessons for Today"
Monday, January 31, 6 p.m.
Funger Hall, Room 103
2201 G St. NW
Washington, DC 20052
For inquiries please contact Christopher Diaz
=============
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre)
By Ann Hornaday
The Washington Post, Friday, October 8, 2010
More than 60 years after it was made, "Nuremberg: Its Lesson for Today" arrives in American theaters as something of a minor miracle.
In 1945, the U.S. prosecutors at the International Military Tribunal made two revolutionary decisions: They commissioned Stuart Schulberg, a filmmaker with the OSS Field Photographic Branch, to create documentaries about Nazi history and atrocities that would be used as evidence in the trial of Nazi war criminals in Nuremberg. And they announced that they wanted the trial itself to be filmed as a document of a new form of transitional justice.
The resulting work was shown in Germany in 1948 and 1949 as part of the greater de-Nazification program. But it was withheld from American audiences (for reasons that have never been clear) until now.
"Nuremberg," a meticulous restoration by Schulberg's daughter Sandra and Josh Waletzky, faithfully preserves the original 1948 documentary, adding new subtitles and a narration by Liev Schreiber.
The intervening decades make the film's messages all the more potent -- and not only in its depiction of how economic insecurity, intolerance and demagoguery can be used to manipulate the most depraved forces of a civilized society. "Nuremberg" also stands as a fascinating record of a nascent international court system, the wages of aggressive war and a country's tentative steps toward coming to grips with its history.
Schulberg's father made "Nuremberg" for the U.S. War Department and the U.S. military government in Berlin, using footage he and his screenwriter brother Budd gathered for the two evidentiary films Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson requested: a four-hour documentary on the history of Nazism and a one-hour documentary about the concentration camps. Schulberg also had access to 25 hours of the trial itself, which lasted nearly a year. Cobbling together the Nazis' own propaganda footage (some of it shot by Leni Riefenstahl), some postwar footage he himself filmed and the trial testimony, Schulberg created a fascinating collage, juxtaposing the bitter truths of the war -- its lies and cruelties and mass murders -- with scenes of its most notorious architects being confronted about their roles.
It's a tawdry, dispiriting tableau. Viewers will be familiar with some of the most distressing images in "Nuremberg," but Schulberg and his team managed to uncover their own fresh hells, such as a film depicting an early gas chamber, using a car with a long exhaust pipe leading into a small cabin. At the trial, the accused war criminals -- 22 in all, including Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Joachim von Ribbentrop and Albert Speer -- looked alternately bored and disgusted, shielding their eyes from the movie lights with dark sunglasses.
Because "Nuremberg" was aimed primarily at German audiences, some references to German history and institutions will be lost on contemporary American audiences. But the specificity of its mission adds to the allure of a film that possesses a riveting brand of rough, raw immediacy. Seen alongside the equally extraordinary "A Film Unfinished," with its Nazi footage of the Warsaw ghetto, "Nuremberg" provides yet another mesmerizing lesson in how even the most cynical propaganda can be recast in the service of truth. And with terms like "war crimes," "military tribunals" and the "Nuremberg principles" now part of a sometimes overheated political vernacular, this heroically preserved film offers a sobering lesson in where and why many of those ideas were first conceived. The "today" of its original title may be been meant for a different generation, but "Nuremberg" couldn't be more of the moment.
Contains disturbing images of the Holocaust and World War II. In English, French, Russian and German with English subtitles.
========
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============
Googlelizing:
Nürnberg und seine Lehre (1946) - IMDb - [ Traduzir esta página ]
Classificação: 6.4/10 - de 12 usuários
Dirigido p/ Pare Lorentz. Estrelando Francis Biddle, Karl Dönitz, Hans Frank. The trial established the "Nuremberg principles" -- the foundation for all subsequent trials for crimes against ... Department's Civil Affairs Division, it was written & directed by Stuart Schulberg, who completed it in 1948. ... Nürnberg und seine Lehre -- Trailer for the 2009 Restoration of Nuremberg: Its Lesson ...
www.imdb.com/title/tt0441889/ - Em cache - Similares
IMDb Video: Nuremberg: Its Lesson for Today - [ Traduzir esta página ]
Description: Trailer for the 2009 Restoration of Nuremberg: Its Lesson for ...
www.imdb.com/video/screenplay/vi4158130457/ - Em cache
Exibir mais resultados de imdb.com
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre ... - [ Traduzir esta página ]
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) ... As documented in the film, the trial established the "Nuremberg principles," laying the ...
www.valleynewslive.com/Global/story.asp?S=13319916
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) - Movie ... - [ Traduzir esta página ]
"Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today" shows how the four allied prosecution teams from the United States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union built ...
nymag.com › Movies - Em cache
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) Movie ... - [ Traduzir esta página ]
Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) info, trailers, and showtime information fast and easy.
tulsa.mrmovietimes.com/.../Nuremberg-Its-Lesson-For-Today-Nurnberg-und-seine-Lehre.html - Estados Unidos - Em cache
Scene - Movie Listings | Tulsa World - [ Traduzir esta página ]
16 Jan 2011 ... Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today (Nurnberg und seine Lehre) Directed By: Pare Lorentz Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/1900. Run Time: 01:18 ...
www.tulsaworld.com/scene/moviesdetail.aspx?movieid... - Em cache
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