POPULARITY
Immer wieder melden sich Personen aus diversen Gesundheitsberufen, die das Thema Sexualität nicht mehr im Verborgenen lassen wollen sondern aktiv angehen möchten. Eine dieser Personen ist meine Lehrgangsabsolventin Theresa Kogler. Bereits im Kurs haben wir so viele Verbindungen gefunden und sie hat ihre Praxis nochmal erweitern können und das sexualpädagogische Wissen in ihrem Arbeitsalltag einfließen lassen können. Wie genau sie das macht in ihrem Job als Ergotehrapeutin erzählt sie im Podcast. Über Theresa: Ich heiße Theresa Kogler, bin Ergotherapeutin, Sexualpädadogin und gerade in der Ausbildung zur Sexualberaterin. Seit 2019 bin ich selbstständig und habe meine eigene Praxis in Gunskirchen. Mir ist es wichtig den Menschen ganzheitlich zu sehen und Sexualität gehört dazu. Ich möchte meinen PatientInnen eine Möglichkeit geben Fragen dazu genauso selbstverständlich stellen zu können wie bei jedem anderen Thema. In meiner Praxis arbeite ich mit neurologischen und orthopädischen PatientInnen. E-Mail : Theresa.kogler@gmail.com
In “Perfekt Geweckt” haben wir heute den Gemeindesong für Gunskirchen präsentiert. Wir wollten wissen, was ihr zum Ski-Weltcup-Start Ende Oktober sagt. Und wir haben wieder zwei Runden “Geheimes Geräusch” gespielt.
In “Perfekt Geweckt” haben wir heute den Gemeindesong für Gunskirchen präsentiert. Wir wollten wissen, was ihr zum Ski-Weltcup-Start Ende Oktober sagt. Und wir haben wieder zwei Runden “Geheimes Geräusch” gespielt.
This is World War II on Topic: Veteran Voices. This episode is a collaboration between the Museum's Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy and the Curatorial Services Department. Back in May 2021, when Senior Curator, Kim Guise, had a conversation with WWII Veteran and Concentration Camp Liberator Alan Moskin. Moskin was a member of the 66th Regiment of the 71st Infantry Division and participated in the Liberation of the Gunskirchen concentration camp in May 1945. He discusses his pre-war life, wartime experiences, and being a part of an innovative exhibit installation, Dimensions in Testimony: Liberator Alan Moskin, an interactive biography from USC Shoah Foundation. If you would like to view the original conversation, you can see it here:
20.April 2015. Ingrid wartet auf ihren nächsten Kunden. Sie ist Taxifahrerin und steht mit ihrem weißen Mercedes vor dem Hauptbahnhof in Linz. Um halb zehn am Abend ist Ingrid die erste in der Taxireihe. Sie weiß, der nächste Fahrgast gehört ihr. Ein Mann öffnet die Tür und steigt ein. Eine Gerichtspsychiaterin wird den Mann später bezeichnen als "jemanden, vor dem man die Gesellschaft schützen muss" und er sei „ein Psychopath, ärger geht's nicht“.
Die Upper Austrian Ladys spielen in der Linzer Tips Arena, es geht am Wochenende ums Finale. Wenn ihr eure Zeit draußen verbringen wollt, dann schaut bei der Landesgartenschau OÖ vorbei. Die hat Samstag und Sonntag noch ein letztes Mal geöffnet. Auch für Familien gibts Programm, zum Beispiel das Eselfest am Wiesmayrgut in Gunskirchen, mit Stallführung und Ponyreiten. Für alle Fans der 80iger ist auch was dabei, Superstar Tanita Tikaram gibt ein Konzert in Oberösterreich.
Die Upper Austrian Ladys spielen in der Linzer Tips Arena, es geht am Wochenende ums Finale. Wenn ihr eure Zeit draußen verbringen wollt, dann schaut bei der Landesgartenschau OÖ vorbei. Die hat Samstag und Sonntag noch ein letztes Mal geöffnet. Auch für Familien gibts Programm, zum Beispiel das Eselfest am Wiesmayrgut in Gunskirchen, mit Stallführung und Ponyreiten. Für alle Fans der 80iger ist auch was dabei, Superstar Tanita Tikaram gibt ein Konzert in Oberösterreich.
Our special guests are Andrew Burian, his wife Ruth, and son Lawrence, who share the story of the Holocaust in a memoir called The Boy from Bustina: A Son, A Survivor, A Witness. A sheltered boy from the small town of Bustina (then Czechoslovakia, now Ukraine), Andrew had a beautiful carefree childhood. At the age of thirteen, his world was shattered. Andrew's wartime odyssey began with deportation from his hometown to Mateszalka ghetto in Hungary. From there, Andrew and his family were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where he survived countless selections and near death experiences. In the freezing winter of 1945, he survived the infamous 'death march' evacuation of Auschwitz-Birkenau and was loaded into a cattle car for the long journey to the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria. Andrew survived another death-march to the Gunskirchen concentration camp from which he was ultimately liberated by the U.S. army. Andrew's journey took him through Hungary, Poland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, England and, finally, the USA where he made a new life. You can buy the book on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Boy-Bustina-Son-Survivor-Witness/dp/9653085174
Go to the photo cut out of the man showing a concentration camp tattoo on his forearm. This man is Henry Wyrobnik. Henry was born in Lodz, Poland. He, his parents, siblings and many other family members were put into the Lodz Ghetto by the Nazis until August 1944, when he and his family were sent to Auschwitz. Henry shared some reflections of his experiences. As the Allied Armies approached, he and thousands of others were taken on a Death March beginning on Jan. 15, 1945. They were given only small amounts of bread. They marched for two weeks, day and night. If someone lagged behind or walked out of line, they were shot immediately by German soldiers. They were put on open coal trains, other trains were hooked on, and they spent two weeks on the train. They had nothing to eat but snow. In Czechoslovakia, people threw food to the trains as they went through the countryside, but the Czech people were shot by the SS, a quasi-military unit that serviced as Hitler’s personal guard, if they were caught throwing food. One hundred eight people were on Henry’s train, “packed like sardines,” and at the end only 35 remained. The train finally took them to Mauthausen. There they were forced to bury bodies in mass graves. In Mauthausen, they had no clothes, no food and were sitting in crowded barracks. At the end of three or four weeks, they were sent to Gunskirchen, a sub-camp of Mauthausen. At the end, Henry says they “spent three weeks without water to drink, living in the woods with mud so deep if you stepped into it, you would sink in.” Many people from other countries were also imprisoned there. They built barracks for 500 people, which were actually a gas chamber. On May 5, 1945, Gunskirschen was liberated and Henry was freed and eventually sent to a hospital to recuperate. He had lost his whole family, including his parents, one brother and two sisters. Henry met his wife, Dora, also a survivor, in a Displaced Persons (DP) Camp at Feldafing, Germany. They came to the U.S. in 1949, and he worked for Shillitos, a department store in Cincinnati. Later, he owned his own business and came to Dayton.
KOKU'da bu hafta: Levisite, Hardal Gazi ve Zyklon-B'nin koku profilleri; "Stellvertreter des Fuehrers", Nazizm'i nasil tanimlamisti?; "Saf Irk" ruyalari ve "sterilizasyon" ilk nerede basladi? Almanya? Hadi oradan!..; Naziler uzaydan mi geldiler? Yoksa acaba etnik bir azinlik miydilar?; Kaiser Wilhem Enstitusu kimin katkilariyla kuruldu? Aa, onlar MoMA'yi kurmamislar miydi?; Der Sturmer'in yayincisi Julius Streicher ve gozu kapaliyken Yahudi tanima yollari; Auschwitz kumandani Rudolf Hoess neyi engelleyemediklerinden sikayetciydi?; Bergen-Belsen'in "Guzel Canavar"i Irma Grese; Birkenau Konzentrationslager'daki "4711" lakapli mahkum kimdi?; 71. Piyade Tumeninden'den Yzb. Pletcher, Gunskirchen'in kokusunu nasil tanimliyordu?
Martin Weiss discusses his liberation from Gunskirchen, a subcamp of Mauthausen, in 1945 and the days immediately following.