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As a teaching assistance I teach an upper division sociology class on crime, violence and war.
Every year, we show the video made by the British when they just arrived to the Bergen-Belsen camps in Germany. It is ONLY one camp, and ONE video, just to give you an idea. The time is 1945 if I well recall.
There are NO words to describe the entire surface of a movie screen FULL jam packed of stacked, naked, dead and dying BODIES and the impact that has on you. It defies imagination. One reason why Hollywood has not been able to render the event on screen is that it is virtually impossible to get that many EXTRAS and starve them and stack in such a way; with the advance of technology and computer generated images that may possibly be done but I am not sure about that - still it may not convey the 'real' feeling one gets seeing the REAL thing.
I have not counted bodies as the count seems nearly impossible viewing the documentary, but I know that: the students we have are deeply, I mean DEEPLY troubled and some have to be debriefed after the movie.
However, no matter how hard it is for them to witness such horror, is IMPORTANT to show people in their 20's something of the sort so that they may know and not forget, lest one day they happen to read Berg's writings or the writings of anybody trying to deny the undeniable and rewrite history.
That is one of the reasons why it is important to do the homework, before stating an 'opinion' - some things are facts, not opinions, but in the wonderful world of Berg, of course, there was never a difference between the two.