Uprising
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:26:01
. . .whom am I refusing to meet?
:26:03
Mordechai Anielewicz.
:26:06
Ringleblum's friend,
who has an interest in history.

:26:09
And in protecting our people.
:26:11
And you think writing up flyers
and underground meetings. . .

:26:15
. . .and preparing resistance
will accomplish this?

:26:19
It's not all I propose.
We must strike back any way we can.

:26:23
And the German
''collective responsibility''?

:26:26
You are proposing to spit at them.
They'll retaliate against innocents. . .

:26:31
. . .even harder than they did
last time.

:26:34
They suffer anyway. They die of
disease, starvation and worse. . .

:26:39
. . .and you negotiate
as if Germans are reasonable?

:26:42
-Yes, I do. I try to minimize the harm.
-So do we!

:26:47
Please, give us a chance.
Give us support to get started.

:26:51
Yours is a romantic notion
that will get you all killed.

:26:55
And I will not support them.
I will not.

:26:57
And you should be wearing a hat.
In this weather you can get pneumonia.

:27:03
Good day.
:27:09
And five, six. . .
:27:12
. . .seven, eight.
:27:16
Plié and stretch.
:27:19
Relevé, down.
:27:23
Grand plié...
:27:26
. . .five, six. . .
:27:28
. . .seven, eight.
:27:30
Grand plié...
:27:32
. . .one, two, three, four.
:27:36
They're gone.
:27:40
It's clear.
:27:43
They're gone.
:27:53
So you talked to Czerniakow?
:27:56
-What did he say?
-He won't support us now.

:27:59
-What about later?
-We're going to be more persuasive.


prev.
next.