In the year 1939, during the occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Nazis, British businessman Nicholas Winton saved the lives of 669 children, most of them Jewish. Disguised as groups of school-children, he got them across the border in trains and transported them all the way through Germany to his safe home Great Britain. For decades, Winton kept his brave rescue operation secret – he did not even tell his wife about it. Only when he met a hundred of the children he saved again in 1988, the story got known in public. The award-winning documentary portrays Winton, who nowadays is over 90 years old, and describes the background of his rescue operation, which back home earned him the nickname “British Schindler”. One learns more about the meticulous preparations, including the forgery of documents, collecting money, and finding British foster families for more than 600 children within a very short time-span. Apart from Nicholas Winton and some of the saved children themselves, Holocaust-experts such as Simon Wiesenthal, Yehuda Bauer, and Elisabeth Maxwell, as well as the former Czech head of state Vaclav Havel get a chance to speak. Nicholas Winton was guest of goEast 2001.
Síla lidskosti - Nicholas Winton / Die Kraft des Guten - Nicholas Winton
CZE, SVK 2002 / 64 min
Director: Matej Mináč
Screenplay: Matej Mináč,Patrik Pašš
Cinematographer: Antonín Daňhel,Antonín Weiser,Peter Zubal,Richard Krivda
Editor: Patrik Pašš
Music: Janusz Stoklosa
Producer: Matej Mináč,Patrik Pašš
Production Company: W.I.P. s.r.o. - Prag,Trigon Production - Bratislava,Česká Televize - Prag,Slovenská televiza - Bratislava
Rights Holder: Telexport - Prag
In the year 1939, during the occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Nazis, British businessman Nicholas Winton saved the lives of 669 children, most of them Jewish. Disguised as groups of school-children, he got them across the border in trains and transported them all the way through Germany to his safe home Great Britain. For decades, Winton kept his brave rescue operation secret – he did not even tell his wife about it. Only when he met a hundred of the children he saved again in 1988, the story got known in public. The award-winning documentary portrays Winton, who nowadays is over 90 years old, and describes the background of his rescue operation, which back home earned him the nickname “British Schindler”. One learns more about the meticulous preparations, including the forgery of documents, collecting money, and finding British foster families for more than 600 children within a very short time-span. Apart from Nicholas Winton and some of the saved children themselves, Holocaust-experts such as Simon Wiesenthal, Yehuda Bauer, and Elisabeth Maxwell, as well as the former Czech head of state Vaclav Havel get a chance to speak. Nicholas Winton was guest of goEast 2001.
Screenplay: Matej Mináč,Patrik Pašš
Cinematographer: Antonín Daňhel,Antonín Weiser,Peter Zubal,Richard Krivda
Editor: Patrik Pašš
Music: Janusz Stoklosa
Producer: Matej Mináč,Patrik Pašš
Production Company: W.I.P. s.r.o. - Prag,Trigon Production - Bratislava,Česká Televize - Prag,Slovenská televiza - Bratislava