- 30.4.2023
"Uns mahnt ein November" ist ein DDR-Spielfilm aus dem Jahr 1958, der vom Kampf gegen den Nationalsozialismus und den Widerstand in der DDR handelt. Der Film wurde von Kurt Maetzig inszeniert und basiert auf dem gleichnamigen Roman von Günter Weisenborn.
Der Film erzählt die Geschichte von drei Menschen, die im November 1932 in Berlin aufeinandertreffen und sich gemeinsam gegen den aufkommenden Nationalsozialismus stellen: Der Sozialdemokrat Willi Albrecht, der kommunistische Widerstandskämpfer Werner Seelenbinder und die Jüdin Ruth Andreas-Friedrich. Dabei zeigt der Film nicht nur den politischen Widerstand gegen den Faschismus, sondern auch die zwischenmenschlichen Beziehungen und Konflikte innerhalb der Gruppe.
Der Film erzählt die Geschichte von drei Menschen, die im November 1932 in Berlin aufeinandertreffen und sich gemeinsam gegen den aufkommenden Nationalsozialismus stellen: Der Sozialdemokrat Willi Albrecht, der kommunistische Widerstandskämpfer Werner Seelenbinder und die Jüdin Ruth Andreas-Friedrich. Dabei zeigt der Film nicht nur den politischen Widerstand gegen den Faschismus, sondern auch die zwischenmenschlichen Beziehungen und Konflikte innerhalb der Gruppe.
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LernenTranskript
00:00Subtitling. BR 2018
00:30Subtitling. BR 2018
01:00So the great marching began.
01:24Some people really believed it was about the fatherland.
01:30But most of them knew that there was nothing to gain for them.
01:34But they didn't know what to do about it.
01:37They marched with blessed weapons and approved war credits.
01:43And the war grew beyond measure.
01:45It was supposed to happen quickly.
01:51Now the material battles raged for months over a ridge.
01:56From Tannenberg via Flanders to Verdun.
02:00It's like a saw, wrote Rosa Luxemburg.
02:05Once there, once back.
02:08And the proletariat always bleeds.
02:10Practice and over there, workers' sons.
02:17Thousands every day.
02:19Too much to comprehend.
02:23But that one, he'll make it through, my boy.
02:27He will get through.
02:28By the time she thought that, she no longer had a son.
02:39But under their hands the grenades for this war continued to be produced.
02:44For the death of the other sons.
02:46Month after month.
02:48Year after year.
02:50O Germany, high in honor.
02:52O holy land, the faithful.
02:54The splendor of your glory shines brightly.
02:56In the East and West.
02:57Compliance with the Burkfried.
02:59What is the absolute task of social democracy in this historical direction.
03:04I don't know any party anymore.
03:06I only know 19.
03:08...works.
03:09So that the Lord does not turn his face away from our fatherland.
03:14May he bless the weapons.
03:16Go on, come and go faster.
03:19Then your men will come home earlier.
03:22All lies.
03:24But who told them the truth?
03:26Who broke the cycle of endurance and striving?
03:30With blessed weapons and approved war credits, the war grew beyond measure.
03:41The good old days are over.
03:44No more fake economic growth and alleged progress.
03:47In need and suffering, even the last thing has been taken away.
03:53The son.
03:55It's bad enough to live in the clutches of an exploitative society.
03:59What an absurdity to die for her.
04:02A feeling of apprehension arose.
04:22Just a hunch.
04:23Because a whole world of lies was deployed to confuse the simplest thing.
04:31On August 19, 1917, when millions had already bled to death and the situation was becoming increasingly hopeless,
04:38Those responsible for this war met in the Düsseldorf Industrial Club.
04:43The surviving protocol is one of the proofs that they are incorrigible.
04:47Not even through the suffering of an entire people.
04:50Privy Councillor Duisberg, please, Privy Councillor.
04:52Gentlemen, the situation on the front lines is good.
05:02The situation is good, said Mr. Duisberg.
05:06However, the masses at home would now have to be confronted more harshly than before.
05:11And his suggestions were to get more out of the workers by all means,
05:17military management of the factories, strike is treason.
05:24And in the end, the recommendation was to better conceal the high dividend payouts.
05:30The reasons for this are only too well known to you all.
05:35It is therefore important here and now to adopt measures that are designed
05:47to guarantee the fighting spirit of our fatherland until final victory.
05:53Privy Councillor Hugenberg will now take the floor.
06:02We are in a difficult fight against enemies who are pressing us on all sides.
06:11And Mr. Hugenberg began to specialize even then.
06:13Instead of peace, he suggested intensifying patriotic propaganda.
06:21The church should help and provide educational literature.
06:26To counteract this by strengthening patriotic propaganda and education.
06:32Our people must be told again and again who their real enemies are.
06:37Originals from the archives show us what this looked like in detail.
06:43What you should eat today or tomorrow, whether potatoes or bread, whether meat or vegetables,
06:47That's not really what matters.
06:49The main thing is, is less at all.
06:56A positive development is reflected in the official statistics.
07:01It is the disappearance of appendicitis.
07:03Every now and then, however, an overzealous person let the cat out of the bag,
07:09like a certain Otto Dibelius.
07:11Yes, exactly the same one who was already a fanatical advocate of a strange
07:15Christianity and whose God wore black, white and red in those years.
07:21What kind of peoples are these over whom the German eel flies its wings in a German peace
07:26want to stretch?
07:27They are peoples in tropical areas.
07:30They are peoples in the east, in the Balkan provinces.
07:33And finally in the west the Flemish people.
07:36The German flag must fly in Africa as a symbol of power.
07:43Dibelius was already in a hurry back then.
07:46And what a wonderful coincidence.
07:48He hit exactly the tone of the memoranda with which the industrial associations, through intermediaries,
07:53The Reich government and the army command directed.
07:55These are documents that can be verified in every detail.
07:59The hatching of this map shows that there was almost no area on the sinkhole where the
08:04German industrial magnates did not want to gain influence, control or even own.
08:09From the Azores to the Far East.
08:11From Africa to New Zealand.
08:12They wanted to make up for what they had previously done during the imperialist division
08:17the world had missed.
08:18And no one should speak of intoxication or insanity.
08:22Cold-blooded and calculating, they formulated their plans of conquest in the midst of this genocide,
08:27which were also intended to prepare for the next war.
08:30And in doing so, they themselves revealed the wolf law of imperialism.
08:33The value of the ore areas to be incorporated for our economy and for future
08:53warfare.
08:54Sieg Heil!
08:55Sieg Heil!
08:57Sieg Heil!
08:57Cheers to the new band!
09:02That was what was behind the splendour and glory, behind the defence of the fatherland
09:09and German way of thinking.
09:11At that time they were called upon to confuse the simplest things, bad enough in their claws
09:17to live, what an absurdity for them to die.
09:20But the building crumbled, despite all the patriotic propaganda, despite all the willingness to rape
09:27and to deceive until the grave.
09:29As more and more people died of hunger and disease at home, the authorities in Berlin
09:34in 1916 and 1917, the bodies were secretly transported away at night in furniture vans, because
09:41they began to fear the unrest of the masses.
09:43They really had their hands full trying to convince people of their useful resignation to fate.
09:53to keep the strength that can arise from need, from exhaustion and from hunger.
10:00But the number of cases where suffering and worry turned into outrage increased.
10:07It turned out that the people were beginning to see through the masters and their lies.
10:11The willingness to act grew and the situation of the rulers became serious.
10:30So, I have the willingness to act and see through the lies.
11:00In this situation, both the exploited and the oppressor hoped for the same thing.
11:11Ebert and Scheidemann sat in the Reichstag as workers’ representatives.
11:15They still benefited from the reputation that the Social Democrats had presented themselves as the party of August
11:19Bebels had acquired.
11:23And so they acted.
11:25When the new storms that spring announces break out, we will be faced with
11:31our flesh and blood, with our wishes and desires for Germany’s free, secure
11:36Be part of the future.
11:38In this sense, in no other sense have we this time the required means for national defense
11:43approved.
11:45In view of this situation, the German Social Democrats once again declare their firm determination
11:50to cease until a peace is achieved that secures the vital interests of the German people.
11:57For these reasons, we approve the requested loans.
12:02Thus they betrayed the faith of those who had elected them and, in the face of millions
12:06Dead continued the betrayal they began on August 4, 1914, with the approval of war credits.
12:13And so the people only had those on their side who said, help yourselves.
12:21Karl Liebknecht, he was imprisoned because he was the only one who opposed the decisions of the International
12:26remained loyal and opposed the war.
12:30He had to stand against two allies.
12:33Against the power of reaction and against those traitors in the SPD who stand between the truth
12:39of the class struggle and the masses.
12:43And behind prison walls like him, Rosa Luxemburg fought for the heart and mind of the German proletariat,
12:55supported by loyal comrades who were part of the German Left in the Spartacus Group
13:00had come together.
13:02From their cells, from their hiding places, with their words and writings came the truth,
13:19that you were looking for, mothers of Germany, starving people, soldiers and workers, who were
13:26ostracized unpatriotic fellows, were the only ones who stood by you.
13:31To you and therefore to Germany.
13:34They knew that ending this war was serving the fatherland.
13:39Heed their call, proletarians.
13:41Lead the fight against this war and at the same time lead it as a fight for power in the stack,
13:46as a fight against the roots of all wars.
13:49And the first confirmation came from the East.
13:58The Russian people began their march to freedom.
14:01The Tsar had been overthrown and the ground was prepared for the decisive battle for peace.
14:07An example was given.
14:10It was something new in the world.
14:12On the Eastern Front, Russian and German workers fraternized.
14:21The uniforms were no longer important when classmates shook hands.
14:32It was something new in the world.
14:36A few months later it suddenly no longer seemed safe,
14:39whether the German fleet would always direct its guns at the targets the Kaiser commanded.
14:44There was open resistance among the sailors.
14:47The gentlemen, alarmed and disturbed, made an example.
14:51The young sailors Reichpitsch and Köbis were the first victims of the German Revolution.
14:58They fell so that the dying would end.
15:03And Spartacus took over their legacy
15:06and pushed the popular movement against the war forward.
15:10In its ranks, workers learned to spread the truth.
15:13The truth about the monopolies and their emperor.
15:16The truth about social chauvinists.
15:18The truth also about the wrong path of the USPD,
15:21who had separated from the Scheidemanns,
15:24whose hesitation and wavering brought even more confusion to the masses.
15:27Two of our comrades, the sailors Reichpitsch and Köbis,
15:32have given their classmates a signal and an example.
15:35German workers act the same way.
15:40It was not an easy path that Spartacus showed.
15:44But it was the only one that could lead out of misery.
15:47The rich are even richer because of the war,
15:55the poor have become even poorer.
16:03The urgent task of the German workers,
16:05peace, just as it is now,
16:08our Russian brothers do.
16:10So that we have our peace and not the peace of the imperialists.
16:14Because there is no help.
16:18Not against the old and not against the new need
16:22as the self-help of the proletariat.
16:26There is no way to peace
16:28than the revolution.
16:31Than the revolution.
16:44And again the confirmation came from the East.
16:52Above the noise of war and doubt, the Aurora's shots rang out.
16:56Red October completed what February had begun.
17:00The Russian workers showed how to fight against the war.
17:04And use war to chase away the injustice of millennia.
17:07If there is a party, disciplined and united,
17:11united and true to the teachings of Marx and Lenin.
17:13Thus began the turning point of the world.
17:16To all.
17:17The All-Russian Congress of Soviets has a new,
17:21a Soviet government was formed.
17:23A government of councils created by the people themselves.
17:28A new, real form of democracy.
17:30The world should hear it.
17:33The proletarians of all countries should follow the example,
17:37so that there may be peace forever.
17:39And the great teacher of the revolution taught not only the Russian proletariat.
17:43The German left took up the call and passed it on.
17:56Help the Russian brothers.
17:58Help yourself.
18:00Follow their example.
18:01The hour of decision has struck for the German proletariat.
18:06On to the fight for peace, freedom, bread.
18:09Down with war.
18:10Down with the government.
18:11Long live the mass struggle of the workers.
18:13Long live socialism.
18:14And this call was echoed millions of times.
18:19When the German imperialists of the young Soviet power
18:21wanted to impose the shameful Peace of Brest-Litovsk,
18:24The most significant action of the German proletariat to date began.
18:32The mass strike begins on Monday, January 28th.
18:36In January 1918, German workers demonstrated
19:04how this war was to be ended.
19:07By wanting to help their Russian brothers,
19:09they felt that they were helping themselves.
19:12Thus the law of solidarity was fulfilled.
19:15Hope went with them to the streets
19:17and came with them out of the darkness of their shafts.
19:23The deadly circle was broken.
19:26And the power that had been asked for so often and so much,
19:29it was their own power that was preparing to accomplish everything.
19:36The German armament machinery had come to a standstill.
19:45In Berlin alone, 650,000 people went on strike.
19:49650,000 of 700,000 employed in industry.
19:53The wave of strikes swept across the entire empire.
19:56Soon two million had stopped working for the dirty war.
20:02Hang in there, comrades.
20:04Then it will only take a few more days and the war will be over.
20:07To the Emperor and King's Majesty.
20:13The movement spread to workers’ centers across the empire.
20:16Security, revolution in Russia and strike in Austria prepared the ground.
20:21The Social Democrats claim that they did not want the strike.
20:25Years later, Scheidemann testified in court,
20:28if we had not joined the strike committee,
20:30then the court would probably no longer be able to meet today.
20:33And then the war and everything else, in my firm belief,
20:37had already ended in January.
20:40What the open reaction against the power of the fighting masses would not have been able to do.
20:45They did it again.
20:46They ended the strike through betrayal.
20:50No, they no longer knew any parties.
20:52Say yes, hold on, save the war once again.
20:56Everyone in their role, Scheidemann this way and the generals that way.
20:59I order the introduction of a heightened state of siege.
21:11Hold on, yes.
21:12Say yes, for the sake of war.
21:14Extraordinary courts begin their work.
21:17Public gatherings are prohibited.
21:20Yes, all for the war.
21:22Violators face severe punishment.
21:26Yes, the war.
21:27Save the war once again.
21:28Yes, those of you who are conscripted will also be drafted into the military.
21:34Von Kessel, General, Colonel.
21:37The roller starts running again.
21:39The war is saved.
21:42And this after there had already been so much hope.
21:45General, we are the emperor's ladder and rungs.
21:52How many have already melted away like water in a river.
21:55Our red blood is also shed uselessly.
21:59General.
21:59Historic days for the emperor and generals.
22:04Historic achievements of the Government and His Majesty's Opposition.
22:11Back and forth, like a saw.
22:15And like never before.
22:17Deeper and deeper into defeat.
22:20General, our children are starving.
22:33Our women are crying.
22:35Our bones rot in foreign soil.
22:38General.
22:38So the year came to an end.
22:44After there had been so much hope in January.
22:50The military fiasco of German imperialism is looming.
22:55Should it also be his political one?
22:57August 1918.
23:03The left-wing groups, led by Spartacus, are acting as is historically necessary.
23:14To all.
23:16Now is the time.
23:18Militarism has collapsed.
23:20Capitalism must collapse with it.
23:24Organize yourselves into workers’ and soldiers’ groups.
23:26Workers be ready.
23:29Prepare for socialist revolution.
23:35What is happening now is all happening against the will of the revisionist trade unionists and party officials of the SPD.
23:41Despite extraordinary courts.
23:43Despite the state of siege.
23:44Despite persecution and court martial.
23:56Mass desertions from the army.
24:08Growing illegal groups in the navy and army and in the factories.
24:11Weapons.
24:14For the best cause for which arms can ever be taken up.
24:18Weapons for the workers.
24:20From now on, many companies had their revolutionary foremen.
24:23So the Spartacus group, and only they were able to do so,
24:26the revolutionary mood of the masses, the struggle of the working class, goal and direction.
24:35And in October, Spartacus calls for an attack from his Imperial Conference.
24:41Led by these men and women.
24:43Proletarians, Germany’s imperialism has been crushed.
25:03This brought the time of the immediate beginning of the revolution closer.
25:07Your hour has come.
25:08Show yourselves their dignity.
25:10The proletariat must fight with all means.
25:14And this call to storm was also a call for peace among the nations.
25:25The fleet in Kiel and 40,000 sailors were the Kaiser's last trump card for the war.
25:32Secret order to sail for England.
25:35The magnificent blue boys were supposed to thunder to the bottom of the North Sea with magnificent momentum.
25:41Hand on the cap, hurray on the lips.
25:46Nothing like that anymore.
25:48No dead heroes go overboard, but the emperor's symbols.
25:52Red flags are raised on His Majesty's battleships.
26:02The revolution began on November 3, 1918, with the sailors' uprising in Kiel against the senseless continuation of the lost war.
26:13Finally, the people's power is directed against the enemy in their own country.
26:17In these days, between November 3 and 9, events begin to unfold rapidly.
26:23Workers’ and soldiers’ councils were formed, first on the coast and then throughout the Reich.
26:27The signal from Kiel finds masses ready to fight.
26:29The working class and its fighting organs at the forefront,
26:32newborn proletarian newspapers calling for a general strike and an uprising.
26:37The march to revolution begins everywhere.
26:40On November 7 and 8, the revolution swept across almost all major cities and centers.
26:44The German people clearly demonstrate their will to break with the past,
26:48to take up the fight with every force that opposes him.
26:52Called upon by the Spartacus groups, with the liberated Kalibknecht at the head,
26:56Berlin is also ready on the eve of November 9th.
27:02Workers and soldiers, social democrats, independent Spartacus people.
27:06Comrades, all of you, the mass of the people,
27:10After unprecedented oppression and betrayal, your hour has now come.
27:14On the land of this earth, which is always recounted,
27:22that not only the father herd, but only the fight comes through like this.
27:30Small table made the oppressor, the one of the name also watched.
27:37A light, a light, a light, a light, a light, a light and a sleep.
27:46God, fully hear these teeth, even to the last tick,
27:54the inter-lingual recognizes the pad flows.
28:00Nothing resisted them and nothing could have resisted them.
28:27After four years of betrayal, finally on his own behalf.
28:32This is how the German workers ended the first imperialist war.
28:37In this way they ended many things that yesterday seemed to be valid for all time.
28:57Nothing resisted them and nothing could have resisted them.
29:09Thus, the German workers ended the hated monarchy and abolished laws and privileges that were considered inviolable just yesterday.
29:32Give orders, legislate, speak Russian to the reactionaries.
29:37Give orders, power laws, speak Russian to the reaction.
29:52Give Befele, get busy in Ukraine.
29:56The signals belong to the people, also to the last prison, the International, the money that turns people.
30:12The signals belong to the people, also to the last prison, the International, the money that turns people.
30:22Nothing resisted them and nothing could have resisted them.
30:26But who will now take over power in the state?
30:30Scheidemann and Ebert already had a different homeland than you, for four years.
30:36Maybe they'll betray you again as you march.
30:40Maybe they are selling off the victory while you trust and believe it has already been won.
30:46There was no force that could have resisted you that day.
30:56The signals belong to the people, also to the last prison, the International, the money that turns people.
31:14People hear the signals, even to the last prison, the International, the money that turns people.
31:18The first issue of the Red Flag appears under the red flags of November 9th.
31:22The Spartacus Group’s first press, first central organ.
31:26Under the red flags of November 9, proclaimed from the Berlin Palace with enthusiastic approval of the masses,
31:32Karl Liebknecht, the Socialist Republic. And he warns.
31:36Don't let yourself be lulled to sleep. The revolution isn't over yet. Don't lay down your weapons.
31:42What has this eagle of the proletarian revolution ignited?
31:45But neither his heroic struggle nor the revolutionary spirit of the masses could replace what was missing.
31:52A party with clear goals, forged into steel in the fire of revolutionary experience.
31:57So the old intrigue could begin again.
32:02November 9th, evening, Reichstag. Meeting of the workers' and soldiers' councils.
32:07The traitors are still in ambush.
32:10Resolution: Election of new councilors on the morning of the next day, November 10.
32:16Afternoon: General meeting of the new councils at Circus Busch to elect the People's Representatives.
32:21The new provisional government. Don't let yourselves be lulled into a trance, Liebknecht warned.
32:26There must be no more Scheidemann in the government, writes the red flag on this day.
32:31Scheidemann, for four years until yesterday, for the Kaiser's war.
32:36Today he becomes People’s Representative for a Socialist Germany.
32:39Ebert. Yesterday, he duly assumed the reins of government from Prince Max von Baden.
32:46Today, People's Representative of the Revolutionary Masses. With seal and signature.
32:52A man without illusions. Yet built on illusions. As always, a traitor.
33:00Ebert picks up the phone. First official act: a bow to the Junkers.
33:05Most humble request to the headquarters of Field Marshal von Hindenburg.
33:09To raise troops against the revolution. Against the councils that elected him.
33:19Second official act. Bow to capital. Most humble request to Krupp, Thyssen, and Stinnes.
33:25Don't misunderstand me. This whole thing isn't meant seriously. Because, unfortunately, the people were serious, we need to gain time.
33:32Only in this way can any property remain untouched.
33:35The whole thing has gone down in history as a socialization scam.
33:39The point was to confuse people's minds.
33:49Some may have even believed that. Of course, something was there.
33:53All the basic remnants of the old power were still there. No unreasonable experiments.
34:01In this way, the masses were appeased and reassured that they would return to the wagons.
34:04Just a few days after November 9, the monopolists had entered into a joint working agreement with the union leaders
34:11Preservation of property and power guaranteed. And that's exactly what would have been there.
34:16Ibn Knecht admonished and warned.
34:26Punish the guilty. Keep the weapons. Expropriate the monopolists. Distrust the government socialists.
34:33Don't stop halfway. Defeat the counterrevolution.
34:46Spartacus admonished and warned. Disarm the reaction. Form the red sheaf.
34:56Reach out to your Russian brothers. Don't stand still.
35:00Reflect, proletarians. Complete the proletarian revolution.
35:04Keep your weapons at bay. Don't put them down. Don't let yourself be lulled to sleep.
35:28This is what the leaders of the proletariat and tens of thousands of members warned and urged.
35:42December 1918. In front of the meeting place of the Reichsrat Congress. 250,000 Berlin workers demonstrate for the goals of the Spartacus League. Karl Liebknecht speaks.
35:53But Liebknecht left them a glowing legacy, published in the Rote Fahne on the day of the murder.
36:00There are defeats that are victories. And victories are more disastrous than defeats.
36:10And from every drop of this blood, the fallen avengers will rise. New warriors of the noble cause that is eternal. Imperishable as the firmament.
36:20The defeated of today will be the winners of tomorrow.
36:26November was a warning. In heavy fighting and under the leadership of Ernst Thälmann, that steely, battle-tested, revolutionary precedent was forged that hadn't yet existed in November.
36:47At every hour, and with many new sacrifices, avengers arise for the fallen and defeated of November. New fighters for the noble, immortal cause.
36:58No one fought Hitler and his gangs as courageously as the Communist Party.
37:03No one shed so much blood in this fight. Closely associated with the Bolsheviks.
37:08Firmly anchored in the international world political system.
37:16Lessons from hard, bitter years reminded us.
37:201918 the KPD. A necessary separation between revisionists and wavering centrists.
37:26In 1946, the SED was founded. A necessary union based on Marxist principles.
37:33A turning point in the history of the German workers' movement and the entire German people towards the completion of the bourgeois-democratic revolution.
37:41The co-founder of the Communist Party. Germany's first workers' president.
37:47Only with the founding of the GDR did what Karl Liebknecht and tens of thousands fought for in the November Revolution become reality.
37:54For the first time on German soil, a state of workers and peasants. On the path to socialist revolution.
38:00November is calling. New fighters are calling because the great march is about to begin for the third time.
38:12Nuclear weapons in the hands of the old war criminals. With Liebknecht, one must say again.
38:16Expropriate the monopolists. Proletarians, focus on the class struggle. For the unfortunate division of the proletariat is back.
38:24Yes, distrust the Ollenhauers and judge them only by their actions.
38:29They are subservient to the raison d'état, like Scheidemann and Ebert. In the spirit of the raison d'état of the war party, they attack the banned KPD and other patriots.
38:39Anti-communism. The greatest folly of our era, as Thomas Mann said. Anti-communism is howling through the streets again.
38:47And in the hall, people clap along faithfully and honestly, all the way to the right.
38:55November is a warning to us. The fifth SED Party Congress proclaimed the struggle for the completion of socialist construction and the consolidation of the workers' and peasants' state.
39:06This strengthens the cause of peace and the cause of the peaceful reunification of Germany.
39:11Unbreakable since Spartacus and the Communist Party of Germany. The fighting community of the Marxist parties. Solidarity with the Soviet Union.
39:20The lesson of November for the proletariat is unforgettable: never again to be defenseless in the conquest and defense of power.
39:31Hammer, sickle, and rifle. The factories and the weapons. In one hand. In the hands of the workers.
39:39November is a warning. Liebknecht's legacy is unforgettable. New fighters are ready.
39:50Liebknecht's comrades in arms from the November days handed over the lessons and warnings of the German proletariat with their weapons.
39:58Experience and mission of the party.
40:00Music
40:21Thanks to you, comrades. Socialism and peace are in good hands.
40:26Music
40:28Music
40:30Music
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1:31:00
0:32
1:16:12