a double album which of course for the beatles was very new and at the time even for rock and roll was really quite thirty tracks on this awful lot of music over ninety minutes. this completely white cover the whole idea was to sort of take things really down reduce them to the bare essentials after the crazy psychedelia of their previous album sergeant pepper s lonely hearts club band. they were just coming off of a meditation retreat in india and they really wanted to get it to the essentials and you mentioned the mixed reactions you know that s very true because some people branded this some critics brand at this as a colossal mess and yet for the real diehard fans of the beatles there s a real charm on this album because of the incredible diversity of the songwriting you know they proved with this record that they weren t just the rock n rollers that musically they could be very sophisticated and the white album of course was reflecting the year one thousand nine hundred sixty eigh
penalties. this is the museum of the history of polish jews the first jews arrived in what is now poland in the tenth century at the beginning of world war two poland had more jewish residents than any other european country about three point four million. only about two hundred thousand survived the holocaust. after the war many polish jews emigrated to israel and the us. yes leaving a population of just forty thousand six. this video shown in the museum shows polish student demonstrations in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight the country s communist government used the protest as an excuse to launch a campaign against so-called zionist sympathizers many jews were forced to leave the communist party others had to resign their teaching jobs at schools and universities by nine hundred seventy one more than fourteen thousand polish jews
international criticism particularly from israel parliament later backed down and decided that violations of the law would result in only civil instead of criminal penalties. this is the museum of the history of polish jews the first jews arrived in what is now poland in the tenth century at the beginning of world war two poland had more jewish residents than any other european country about three point four million. only about two hundred thousand survived the holocaust. after the war many polish jews emigrated to israel and the us leaving a population of just forty thousand excess decisions this video shown in the museum shows polish student demonstrations in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight the country s communist government used the protest as an excuse to launch a campaign against so-called zionist sympathizers many jews were forced to leave
beginning of world war two poland had more jewish residents than any other european country about three point four million. only about two hundred thousand survived the holocaust. after the war many polish jews emigrated to israel and the us leaving a population of just forty thousand this is it is this video shown in the museum shows polish student demonstrations in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight the country s communist government used the protest as an excuse to launch a campaign against so-called zionist sympathizers many jews were forced to leave the communist party others had to resign their teaching jobs at schools and universities by nine hundred seventy one more than fourteen thousand polish jews had left the country in desperation and members compare things to the narrative has been drawn between the discourse. nineteen sixty eight and today s discourse both
august death in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight becomes a catalyst for the student revolt. their leader. the revolutionary his comrades and the authoritarian. the is one of the spear heads of the movement that formed in the post-war era as are. reaction to bush german society the charismatic head of the socialist students union demands a d. not such a case of the police and other branches of government and criticises legal reforms as undemocratic. in april one thousand nine hundred sixty eight an attempt is made on route because life he survives seriously wounded but never fully recovers. the mood escalates the willingness to use violence grows in left wing circles the fear of germany becoming fascist is strong the movement is radicalized. this contributes to the founding of the notorious terror group red army faction. nine hundred