Nachruf – Obituary Sam Pivnik

Nachruf – Obituary Sam Pivnik

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Heute steht in der Jüdischen Allgemeinen mein Treffen mit Sam Pivnik, ZT’L  eines der letzten, die er machte. Und auch er war einer der Letzten, die noch lebten, einer jener wenigen, die Auschwitz überlebt hatten.

Der Text war nicht als Nachruf gedacht, sondern als Porträt, doch Pivnik verstarb leider letzte Woche zwei Tage vor seinem 91. Geburtstag.  Er erschien im Grunde als relativ heiterer Mensch, der im übrigen auch noch Interesse an der schicken Lederjacke seines Freundes Philip Appelby zeigte: “Wenn Du so eine nochmal siehst kauf mir eine”?

Nur am Ende des Interviews zeigte sich ein wenig Müdigkeit, und sein sein nicht so guter Gesundheitszustand kam zuvor, als er in Momenten der geistigen Abwesenheit spontan immer wieder sanft “Hilfe”, “Hilfe”, rief,  obwohl aüßerlich alles in Ordnung war.

Pivnik hatte Unsagbares mitgemacht, und als ob Auschwitz nicht genug gewesen wäre, nicht nur an einem der Horrororte des Nationalsozialismuses. Er überlebte wiederholt entgegen jeglicher rational denkbarer Möglichkeiten.

Das Glück des Überlebens und langen Lebens bedeutete jedoch nicht ein geradezu gutes  danach. Während er mit dem Verlieren der Toten der eigenen Familie zurechtkommen musste, und dem was er erlebt hatte, schaffte er es nicht im Arbeitsleben auf einen grünen Zweig zu kommen. Dem Fehlen des ausreichenden Unterhalts schrieb er das Fehlen einer Familiengrümdung zu, obwohl es laut seinem Freund Appelby nicht an interessierten potentiellen  Lebensgefährtinnen mangelte.

So war es das Altersheim, welches er schließlich als Paradis am Ende nannte, denn hier würde alles für ihn gemacht.

Sein Wunsch in Israel bestattet zu werden ist richtungsführend nicht nur für seinen Glauben daran, dass Israel richtig sei, sondern auch seinen Glauben an Gott trotz allem.

Pivnik ging nach Israel gegangen, weil es seiner  Schwester, die in der zionistischen Jugendbewegung war, und die vor dem Krieg auswandern wollte, von ihrem  Vaterverwährt wurde.  Sie wurde stattdessen in der  Shoa umgebracht. Er ging also für sie. Und sein Vater war ein tiefgläubiger frommer Jude. Auch er starb in der Shoa und Pivnik hielt für ihn am Glauben fest, trotz Fehler. In Auschwitz wäre Gott aber nicht, gewesen, schrieb er einst.

Der ganze Nachruf in der Jüdischen Allgemeinen kann hier gelesen werden

http://www.juedische-allgemeine.de/article/view/id/29528

 

Daniel Zylbersztajn – 2015 Selektion

Some of my 2015 Photographs

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Text Selection 2015

Radio Feature DW Jewish Child Refugee  Martin Lubowski links und Frank Auerach mitte mit Kollegin (r) https://dzx2.net/2015/12/23/radio-featureworld-in-progress-jewish-child-refugee/
 die-novemberpogrome-von-1938-gallerypicture-15_620x349 Reichskristallnacht und das Volk. (English Comment) https://dzx2.net/2015/11/09/reichskristallnacht-und-das-volk/
Interview: Die Überlebende: Marina Litvinenko, the survivor

DSC02351
Marina Litwinenko (Litvinenko) (c) All Rights Reserved Daniel Zylbersztajn 2015
https://dzx2.net/2015/03/12/die-uberlebende-marina-litwinenko-the-survivor-marina-litvinenko/
Cynthia McDonald im Hintergrund, im Vodergrund Landy Richmond, mit Toechtern waehrend seiner Theraphie https://dzx2.net/2015/06/27/back-to-eden-kult-hairstylist-in-london-the-roots-of-hair-culture/ Back To Eden, London Rastafari Hair Couture from the Roots
World Capital for the Rich

1Hyde Park (15)
(c) All Rights Reserved Daniel Zylbersztajn 2015
https://dzx2.net/2015/05/05/eine-weltstadt-fur-reiche-world-capital-for-the-rich/
Leitkommentar / Leading Comment Juedische Allgemeine https://dzx2.net/2015/06/25/bds-gegen-den-isolierten-boykott-von-israel-against-the-isolated-boycott-of-israel/  israel-flag
Sind heute beide tot. Der in Berlin geborene Hans Freund, und Enkel Jeremiah Duggan (damals 8 Jahre) am Sedertisch (Bild fuer J.A. mit freundl. Genehmigung der Familie)  Der Fall Jeremiah Duggan

 

 

 

dzx2.net/2015/06/04/kommentar-zu-jeremiah-duggan-inkompetenz-der-kripo-bei-potenziellen-judischen-mordopfer-vor-12-jahren/
Nie Wieder Keine Farbigen https://dzx2.net/2015/05/12/never-again-no-coloureds-nie-wieder-keine-farbigen/

01 Staying Power Anzeige am Black Cultiral Archives in Brixton (c) Daniel Zylbersztajn
01 Staying Power Anzeige am Black Cultiral Archives in Brixton (c) Daniel Zylbersztajn

Modell des Denkmals an die den transatlantischen Sklavenhandel. Mit freundlicher Erlaubnis (c) memorial2007.org.uk
Model of the slavery memorial that was planned for Hyde Park | Modellbüste des Sklavenhandeldenkmals
A Question of Remembering https://dzx2.net/2015/04/16/eine-frage-des-nationalen-gedenkens-und-vergessens-a-question-of-national-memorialisation-and-forgetting/
Remembering Terror 1972 https://dzx2.net/2015/03/09/how-to-remember-the-terrorism-of-1972/

AND

https://dzx2.net/2015/01/11/terror-not-remembered-dont-kill-our-snow-fun-hill-a-sorry-tale-of-a-limping-democratic-intervention/

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Picture Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munich_massacre

2013-10-19 12.08.37-1
(c) Daniel Zylbersztajn
Schuhe selbst machen https://dzx2.net/2015/01/31/schuhe-selbst-machen-in-moretonhampstead-devon-go-make-your-own-shoes/
 Ai Weiwei in London

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Anish Kapoor & Ai Weiwei Selfie auf dem Marsch für Flüchtlinge (8 mile walk for refugees) ! (c) Daniel Zylbersztajn
 https://dzx2.net/2015/09/21/ai-weiwei-royal-academy-london/

Claridge’s Brook Penthousesuit, Bett Foto (c) Daniel Zylbersztajn 2015
London: Von Privatbuttler bus zur  Mausefalle  (from private buttler to a mat in a tent.  https://dzx2.net/2015/09/29/von-privatbuttler-bis-mausefalle-taz-hier-mit-bildern/
Frank Auerbach, the old master

 

 

 

 

Vorherige Jahre:

Previous Years Reviews

Selektion 2014

Selektion 2013

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Schild zu Frank Auerbachs Studio(c) Daniel Zylbersztajn

 

 

 

Selektion  2012

Andere

 https://dzx2.net/2015/07/21/frank-auerbach-the-old-master-frank-auerbach-der-alte-meister/

 

 

 

Frank Auerbach the old master – Frank Auerbach der Alte Meister

Einer der wunderbaren Gelegenheiten in meinem Beruf, war die Erforschung des Malers Frank Auerbachs. Einige Wochen lang, war ich auf seinen Spuren, las über ihn, und kam ihn mindestens eine Person entfernt nah. Es war jedoch enttäuschend, dass der Maler sich nicht mit mir dem Londoner Vertreter der ältesten deutschen jüdischen Zeitung treffen wollte, trotz seines eignen Weges der ihn als verfolgter Jude von Berlin nach London führte.  Auerbach gilt als Menschenscheu, und ich wollte seine Bitte ihn nicht zu stören unbedingt einhalten, obwohl ich genau wusste wo ich anklopfen musste. Journalismus hat auch etwas mit Ethik zu tun. Der Bericht hierzu erschien in der Jüdischen Allgemeinen.

Link: http://www.juedische-allgemeine.de/article/view/id/22745

One of the marvelous things of my job was the task to write up a “portrait” of Frank Auerbach. For several weeks I read and followed the traces of his life, and managed to get as close as one person distanced to him. It was disappointing that he did not want to meet with me, the representative of the oldest and largest German Jewish newspaper, given his own German Jewish roots. Auerbach is regarded as shy and does not want to waste his time doing anything but painting. I was not going to break his plea not to seek him out, that type of respect belongs to the code of ethics of journalism, even though I knew exactly which door I would have had to knock on. My report came out in the Jüdische Allgemeine.

Link: http://www.juedische-allgemeine.de/article/view/id/22745

Korrekturen / Corrections:

1. Der junge Frank Auerbach stand nicht im Pausehof, sondern im Garten des Internats Bunce Court

1. The young Frank Auerbach was recorded in the garden of Bunce Ct. not the area for break time

2. Frank Auerbach hat nur eine Frau, auch wenn die Beziehung eine lange Pause machte.

2. Frank Auerbach only has one wife, alough the relatinship was on pause for many years.

3. Der Lyddelton Arms ist nicht irgend ein London Pub, sondern einer der dem Studio Auerbachs am nächsten liegt.

3. The Lyddelton Arms is not “one pub in London,” but one of the nearest pubs situated to the location of Auerbach’s studio.

Eine Frage des nationalen Gedenkens und Vergessens. A question of national memorization and forgetting

Potentieller Ort des Shoa Memorials neben der Tate. |Potential location of the shoa memorial next to Tate Britain.
Potentieller Ort des Shoa Memorials neben der Tate. |Potential location of the shoa memorial next to Tate Britain.

GERMAN: In London wird eine nationale ‪#‎Holocaust‬ Gedenkstätte gebaut. Man will dabei nicht sparsam mit den Fehlern des eigenen Landes sein. Doch manche wundern sich über das Vergessen einer Geschichte die viel mehr mit Entscheidungen London zu tun haben!
ENGLISH:  In London a holocaust memorial is to be set up. Britain warrants not to be economical with the truth and British mistakes. But some observers note that another history whose decisions were actually made from within London has not yet got appropriate remembrance.

http://www.juedische-allgemeine.de/article/view/id/22013

ENGLISH TRANSLATION (ALL RIGHTS RESERVED) (slightly altered with original quotes)

This text in a slightly shorter version was first published in German in the Juedische Allgemeine 14th April 2015:

Two months ago the British government announced, that it would make available the equivalent of around 67 million Euros for the construction of a national Holocaust memorial in London. Consultations concerning this proposal which brought together experts and survivors had gone on in the previous year. Amongst others they felt that too many different organizations had sought to obtain funding for holocaust related memorialisation. With the planned national memorial site the research and the remembrance are to be better managed and administered.

The new memorial site will be fitted with an integral educational centre using the latest technology. As a first and pressing step, survivor testimonies of the still living witnesses are to be recorded for posterity.

Despite the liberation of the concentration camp Bergen-Belsen through the British Army and the Allied victory 70 years ago, Great Britain’s image at the memorial site is not to be shown triumphantly, argues the Jewish historian David Ceserani, who was also privy of the consultation.
Ceserani said in particluar:

It would be essential to show how Britain was involved in the fate of Europe’s Jews in the 1930s and 1940s and that in doing so it would also be absolutely necessary to confront the negative elements of the story.

In the historical preamble, the report mentions the appeasement of Nazi Germany, the grudging response to the refugee crisis, domestic anti-Semitism and fascism,  internment, the closing of the Jewish national home to Jewish fugitives from Europe, and the patchy response to information about the mass murder of Jews during the war. The report in absolutely clear that the learning centre, which will be organically connected to the memorial, will present an honest appraisal of Britain’s relationship to the fate of the Jews and that it will not be ‘triumphalist’. Equally, the educational programme that will be developed over time will encourage young people to dwell on the ambiguities of the British response to Jewish suffering. It will not be a ‘whitewash’.”

Kurt
Kurt Marx (c) Daniel Zylbersztajn

A group of aged holocaust survivors at the holocaust survivor centre Shalvata, the only such institution in the UK, welcomed the announcement to build a national Holocaust memorial site. Kurt Marx (89), who grew up in Cologne, and had fled with the Kindertransport to England, argues it should be a place that remembers and shows what evil humans are capable of performing. “In the beginning many thought Hitler was only a madman and he would not stay for long. But what he did, in spite of the fact that Germany understood itself as a civil society, “says Marx.
Marx is grateful to Britain for his rescue. But he remembers, that many Britons made no difference between him a German Jew and Nazis at the beginning,. Even today this would continue. At Shalvata he is not allowed to speak German, as it might upset some other attendees.

Belgian-born Sarah Espinoza, who escaped the Nazis just before the outbreak of war “on the last boat across the Channel to England”, as she says, reports shockingly how she spotted a sign during a recent visit to Belgium which read : “No Dogs and No Jews!” This is evidence that rampant anti-Semitism continues, she argues. “If you do not drum it into the heads of people, the Shoah will be forgotten and one day history may repeat itself,” fears the 90-year-old.

Chaim Olmert, Shoaueberlebender | Shoa survivor Chaim Olmert (c) Daniel Zylbersztajn
Chaim Olmert, Shoaueberlebender | Shoa survivor Chaim Olmert (c) Daniel Zylbersztajn

Chaim Olmert (87), survivor of numerous labour and concentration camps, demands, that the new centre will depict the Holocaust in all its complexity. He states how his wife’s family had been arrested by the British during their attempt to escape to Palestine and sent to prison in Mauritius instead. He adds, “It is important that the Holocaust is not thrown together with other genocides in the same pot, because it was a unique chapter in human history,” admonishes Olmert.

Where exactly the memorial will be located is as yet not entirely clear. Currently there are three possible locations however: Near Tower Bridge, next to the Tate Britain Gallery and in front of the Imperial War Museum. The suggested sites follow other findings from the commission concerning the holocaust memorial site, for many survivors were unhappy with the current London Holocaust monument erected in Hyde Park in 1983. They believe it to be too small and rather distanced from the centre of town.
But another group would rather welcome a memorial in Hyde Park. The former history teacher Oku Ekpenyon (69), she received an MBE for her initiative on African and Black history, has been campaigning for the erection of a monument in Hyde Park to commemorates the victims of the slave trade since 2002. In fact 2008 Ekpenyon received assurances from the London Mayor Boris Johnson hereto, but the project has been stalled ever since due of a lack of funds.

Model of the slavery memorial that was planned for Hyde Park | Modellbüste  des Sklavenhandeldenkmals
Model of the slavery memorial that was planned for Hyde Park | Modellbüste des Sklavenhandeldenkmals

Now that the government has announced,  it intends to finance a Holocaust memorial, Ekpenyon wrote a letter to Prime Minister David Cameron, asking for government help: “The government claims it wishes to remember the human suffering of the Jews during the the Holocaust. With a fraction of the sum intended for the Holocaust Memorial, you can ensure that there is also a site that reflects on the time of slavery and the price African people paid for the development of this nation. ”

Star Wars actor Hugh Quarshie, one of the patrons of the slavery memorial campaign, argued:

“I think there should be a Memorial in every major capital city, just as there are tombs to The Unknown Soldier.  It is not simply appropriate and important but essential because it would signify universal recognition that the attempted extermination of one group of human beings by another group of human beings is not just wrong but an absolute evil.  We talk about The Holocaust because it it is still within living memory, was strategically planned, systematically executed and perpetrated by a nation claiming to be at the highest rank of civilisation, and extensively documented, recorded and even filmed. The word Holocaust is not to be used lightly; there are gradations ranging from mass murder to ‘ethnic cleansing’, to genocide.  But it is my hope that such memorials would also testify to the atrocities of earlier holocausts not so extensively documented, but no less extensive in their scale or their atrocity: the near extermination of the indigenous people of South America by the Conquistadores, recorded by Bartolomeo de las Casas in his anguished Account of the Destruction of The Indies; and of course the Transatlantic Slave Trade.  We can only estimate how many millions died during the crossings or were brutalised and worked to death after arrival. This was brutality on an industrial scale, carried out by nations claiming to be among the most sophisticated on earth; but there have been no apologies made or reparations paid.  And it is precisely because there are no living witnesses that we need memorials to these horrors.”
Freddie Knoller (Foto HMT, mit Erlaubnis)
Freddie Knoller (Foto HMT, mit Erlaubnis)

The 93-year-old Auschwitz survivor Freddy Knoller, born in Vienna, understands this. His greatest fear, he says, is oblivion and indifference – especially when the survivors will no longer be there. He sees the planned Holocaust Memorial as an important  reminder to democracy, because something like the Holocaust could only rise out of dictatorship. Freddy Knoller’s lead for the memorial is however far more humane, “Let us love one another, not murder,” the old man begs, who has been himself, he claims, a life long optimist. “I never gave up!”

Shoa, Trauma, Threat and Claude Lanzmann’s Tsahal

Cover of "Shoah"
Cover of Shoah

Claude Lanzmann is the creator of the epic film documentary Shoa that many may still remember.  He made another documentary film  entitled Tsahal.  In this work I considered both films and the possible relevance of linking the shoa and the Israeli Defence Forces.

This is one of those works I would have liked to integrate into my PhD.

Document not available online!  Please contact me if interested!

Bonnie Greer and Julia Pascal discuss Slavery and Shoa

Date of production: 16 November 1999

Produced and presented by: Daniel Zylbersztajn

LISTEN HERE

IN: Recently British Jewish

Out: For Deutsche Welle I am Daniel Zylbersztajn from London

Script

D.Z.:

Recently British Jewish Playwriter Julia Pascal and Black American Playwriter Bonnie Greer united their creative powers in a unique event at the British Library in London, which was to try to combine the work of the two writers in one event.

More significantly, in order to bring together, Jews and Blacks and their histories of collective sufferings, led by the voices of women. This was going to be a day that had the issues of trauma, loss and survival and how to enact these histories on stage, at its heart.

But not only was this a performing event, but it opened up to a critical debate, following presentations of Greer’s and Pascal’s works, a debate in which holocaust survivors, who were amongst the invited guests, actively participated and thus allowed for invaluable first hand commentary.

The two writers had worked previously together, Bonnie Greer has been acting for Julia Pascal and is now associate writer of the Pascal Theatre Company.

The event opened with extracts from various plays by Julia Pascal. Julia Pascal has gained international credibility as a second generation British Jew. Her plays include Theresa, The Dead Woman on Holiday, and Dybuk, all of whom deal with

holocaust survivor stories in one form or another. This year she released a new book entitled Holocaust Triology.

Here is one of the extracts taken from Julia Pascal’s play Dybuk:

[extract from dybuk]

D.Z.:

After a break Bonnie Greer, continued the event with readings from her works, – which included extracts from her first novel Hanging by her Teeth, and passages from a series of forthcoming short stories of hers. These stories deal with conflicting identities of African American women at locations outside the United States. The following extracts were read from the story called “A Frivolous Girl”, which features the confrontation of a young African American teenager with her first visit to Africa:

[extract from a very frivolous girl]

The presentations of the two play writers, were followed by an open discussion, which centred on the question of the possibility of picturing the black experience along side the Jewish and vice versa.

D.Z.:

This is Eugenie (say u-gine) Dodd a child survivor, who was inspiration to a forthcoming play called Dora:

“I think the experience is very different! There is the Jewish Experience and there is the black experience and I am not sure that they are exactly the same because there is a very, very different cultural background to them. And maybe you generalise it too much. You could say both of them are experiences of displaced people. But there is much more to it than that.”

D.Z.:

Boonie Greer responded to Eugenie Dodd, referring to her father who served in the then still segregated US Army:

“I do have to go back to my dad. If my dad could make a link in himself. I mean he was a guy who saw lynching, forced to see lynching – forced to see a lynching, when he was six year old -the clan made them all watch this man lynch. And he was in the segregated army in the United States. If he could feel that this related to him on some level, and when he went to that concentration camp, that’s what he reported to us. Of course the particularities are absolutely different.”

[Dodd] “But then you see there is also the visual aspect of it. You are black, I might be Jewish! When in the Dybuk there is this aspect of: Do I disclose that I am Jewish, Do I say so, am I embarrassed about being Jewish? You can’t do that! That’s choice!”

D.Z.:

This was Eugenie Dodd answering Bonnie Greer’s reflection. Julia Pascal challenged the point about Jewish invisibility, remembering experiences whilst playing in France:

“Personally I know. In France I was taken to be an Arab. So I had quite a lot of race hatred. That’s the nearest I can get! That was my personal journey into that. And the fact that Bonnie was in it: we are the same generation, and lived through certain things. That for me was my way to do that.”

D.Z.:

So are the Jewish and the Black experiences the same? If Julia Pascal can feel racism for being mistaken to be an Arab in some racist corners of France, is it possible for a black person to understand the Jewish experience. Bonnie Greer again:

You have to hear me say to you that I can empathise. You see that’s the first thing that I am saying., and the rest of it is detail! You know what I mean? We have to work it out some kind of way. And I am not a spokes-person for anybody. All oppressed people have a commonality with that experience. The details and particulars are everybody’s details and particulars. I don’t deny that at all. But I am saying that there are things that I understand. And the things that I understand are the things that we should meet on, we should talk about, we should built on! And I understand everything because everything has happened to black people, so I understand it all! Except the thing is, what you chose and how you function. It is how we can start to work to build the things that we need to build! There is memory with a big M and there is memory with a little M. And I have on my wall pictures all the way back to my great great great great grand mother, little photos. One of them was a slave! And always through our family they talked about this experience. The waiting at the night for the door, the lynchings, the living in quarters where you weren’t fed, going out to work without any kind of recompense, the total fear that people lived into and people still live in many parts of the South, even as I speak. That memory, which happens to do with oppression, an art or creative person can use that, to pit into a particular mode. The rest of it, of course you check with the experts, with people who actually lived through it, with people who’ve gone through the particular thing that you’re writing on. But that general memory is something you can pull back from your own experience. And anyone who comes from an experience, an in fact anyone who doesn’t come from an experience of being particularly oppressed, if you work it through creatively, you can find a general moment that you can then use. So I feel that I was able to create that. Because I had from my own history those same experiences in general, not in particular but in general!

D.Z.:

Bonnie Greer. Having established that there was a similarity in the perception of the experiences, what is the whole purpose of these representations? A member of the audience opened up the debate:

“ I am coming from a slightly different perspective. I was interested in what you were saying about memories. The minute you were talking about memory and relating memories and sharing memories is making it impossible for the denial of those memories. And that’s what I find key in what you’re all saying is how do we prevent that denial. I work with children who have been abused. And there is so much about denial that that actually happens. So much about denying themselves that it actually happened to them. There comes a point when they can talk about it, which may not be for many years and what we have to do is to equip ourselves against that denial. That is what removes stereotyping, that is what fights prejudices, that’s the way to tackle. “

D.Z.:

In this light the point about traumatic collective experiences, their memory and the prevention of their denial become very acutely relevant. Bonnie Greer put it like that:

“We can remember and we can make words. So as long as we keep making language, and with our bodies and with our minds and with our voices, we can at least pass on the legacy of not denying! It’s true for black people. It’s what black people try to get, all of us in the Diaspora, the African Diaspora, really try to get the rest of the world to see, is not denying, not deny what happened. And you are doing this as well, Jewish people: We must stop denying, and there is so much denial going on. That’s the key.”

D.Z:

In her concluding words Julia Pascal added a contemporary example of such denial. Referring to the holocaust revisionist David Irving, who has been in various trials for holocaust denial, including countries such as Australia, Germany and recently Great Britain, she stated:

“Yeah, I just bring it back to the David Irving case. The whole thesis of that denial is to deny that Hitler knew what was going on, and that is why today is important and why we are connected, cause it’s the same story – from them – and that’s why it is terribly important why we go on making the work. What else can we do? We the next generation, who didn’t know it directly, but it’s so close to us, it’s our duty to tell those stories in any way we can!”

D.Z:
produced for DW in 1999 – full transcript follows – all rights reserved!

The implications for these words are grand. Not only for the Jewish and African Diasporas. Denial of the existence of suffering equally applies to millions and millions of forgotten souls wherever we live or you may listen, who bear evidence to the worst in human nature. All to quote Bonnie Greer, are different in particular but the human traumas and nightmares, are equal in general.

For Deutsche Welle, I am Daniel Zylbersztajn from London.

© 2000 DeutscheWelle

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED