Never Again is Now Global, a documentary by Vera Sharav.

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Never Again is Now Global.

https://neveragainisnowglobal.com/

Vera Sharav's documentary series
"Never Again is Now Global"
The five-part docuseries "Never Again is Now Global” debuts January 30, 2023.
This ambitious film project is the brainchild of Holocaust survivor and human rights activist
Vera Sharav.
The series addresses the many parallels between the Holocaust and the last three years of
lockdowns and coerced medical procedures. It’s rooted in Sharav's experiences both as a
survivor and as the mother of Amikhai Sharav, a young man who died as the result of
taking a prescribed medication whose risks had not been disclosed to the public.
Two things make this series unique:
First, while there have been many film and television programs about the Holocaust, most
recently Ken Burns' high profile three-part PBS series, it's difficult to find even one that was
directed and produced by an actual Holocaust survivor themself.
Second, almost without exception, exhibitions and documentaries about the Holocaust treat
it as a unique, unprecedented event that happened in a distant time at the hands of
madmen. This series demonstrates the historical fact that the Holocaust actually had its
roots as a German government program to eliminate disabled people with doctors and
nurses acting as the executors in the service of a “eugenics” ideology. It further
demonstrates that the attitudes that gave birth to the larger Holocaust are still alive and well
in contemporary government policies and medical hierarchies.
Sharav states, "No one in their right mind would suggest that the Holocaust was an 'honest
mistake'. Despite this, not only do we still have many millions of people going along with
and even supporting the fraud and abuse of the last three years, we also have many
millions more who are not able to see the obvious similarities between the tactics and
abuses during the Nazi era and now. I made the series to address this."
Until now, anyone who has attempted to draw attention to or make even modest
comparisons between the present day schemes and the Nazi era has invited a barrage of
energetic and sustained criticism from corporate news media voices.
Sharav's strategy in crafting the series included not only sharing her own perspective,
which is honed by over twenty years of research, and writing as director of the non-profit
Alliance for Human Research Protection ARHP.org, but also inviting fellow Holocaust
survivors and their descendants to impart their views as well.
"The film has no narrator. I prepared no questions. I simply turned on the camera and let
each survivor say what they wanted to say without prompting of any kind," said Sharav.
Far from being tentative about making comparisons between current events and the
horrors they personally experienced, survivors were outspoken on the issue, some even
stating that they felt the present era is potentially even worse because of the advanced
technologies that are now available to track and control people. "There will be no place to
hide," Sharav says about the current state of the surveillance and identity card systems
being pushed by authoritarians.
In addition to the survivors - Vera Sharav, Sarah Gross, Henny Fischler, and Kataline Egett
- testimony and comments from 2nd, 3rd, and 4th generation family members were
included as well. In one particularly poignant scene Arnon Grossman spoke on behalf of
his father, Arie Grossman, a survivor, who was banned from a Holocaust memorial event in
Israel because he refused the injections and thus could not present a vaccine passport.
Given that this is the last living generation of Holocaust survivors and so many have
passed, some stories about the nature of the Nazi repression and how people resisted and
fought back had to, by necessity, be told by younger family members who received the
stories directly from their parents and grandparents.
For example, the film includes family history related by the nephew of Sophie Scholl, the
twenty-two year old member of the White Rose, a non-violent resistance group in Germany,
who was guillotined for posting flyers against the Nazi regime.
Isyyes Keidar, the grandson of Holocaust survivors, points out a little-discussed
phenomenon that the Nazis were often 'kind', offering to help, providing food and shelter,
luring people onto the trains. Those people who cooperated and got peacefully on the train
ended up in camps. Those who resisted the Nazis, whether in hiding or armed as guerrillas,
were the ones that survived, including members of his own family.
In addition to testimony and insights from Holocaust survivors and their families, the series
also includes the voices of Jewish leaders, historians, professors, doctors, activists and
scientists including a former Vice President of Pfizer.
In one striking scene, historian Edwin Black lists the U.S. corporations whose
manufacturing prowess literally powered the Nazi military machine. "Without their
contributions the blitzkrieg would have to have been carried out on horses." Black also
details the role one still-current Big Tech player, IBM, played in providing the Nazi
government with advanced information systems without which the vast operations of the
Holocaust itself would have been logistically impossible.
Dr. Vladmir Zelenko, the grandson of Holocaust survivors and the person Sharav dedicated
the series to, sums up the primary issue and what's at stake: "It's not in the purview of any
sociopath to decide who will live on the planet, how long we'll live, and who will be
free...We're currently in a race between enslavement and the advancement of human
consciousness."
The film’s website: NeverAgainisNowGlobal.com
For more information contact: Paul Morrison, The Morrison Publicity Group,
paul@MorrisonPublicityGroup.com

Another short video by Vera Sherav
https://rumble.com/v13vt7h--1918-.html?mref=2hzb1&mrefc=4

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