Walk On Water
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1:12:09
Let's stop here for a coffee.
1:12:20
Thank you.
1:12:22
That was the first highway in Germany.
1:12:26
In the 20s there were car races here.
1:12:30
Do you see those seats over there?
1:12:33
That's were all the important people
would sit and watch the races,

1:12:36
- all the politicians, the aristocrats.
- And then, Hitler and his people.

1:12:41
Yes, he was sitting there too.
1:12:49
You know, when we were in high school,
1:12:51
a group of students went to Germany
as part of an exchange program

1:12:56
so there were
all kinds of stories about

1:12:59
how the German girls
were easy and you know...

1:13:02
But there was one thing
I couldn't get out of my head.

1:13:05
My friends took it out that anyone
they saw who was over 60 years old

1:13:10
was a grown up during the war
and probably participated in it.

1:13:14
so they made up this game where
they walked up to all the people the street

1:13:18
and asked them in Hebrew: where were you
when my family was burned at the camps?

1:13:24
And they started
laughing and... You know...

1:13:28
Do you want to play this game here?
1:13:30
It did pass my mind, but I figure that
1:13:34
only people over 80, 85
could have been in the Army then.

1:13:37
- Very few are still alive.
- Don't be a sissy! Give it a try!

1:13:44
How old would you say this man is?
1:13:51
- What is it?
- You won't believe this...

1:13:55
but I know this man.
He is a friend of my parents.


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