taj film mi je totalno nejasan, postavlja se mnoštvo pitanja, ali najbitnije je gde su ta deca posle završila?
inače, jedan interesantan review hrvackog nacionaliste na IMDB, koja luda perspektiva
1. There is no explanation in the movie how Diana Budisavljevic saved ten thousand children, except for some foggy indication that some "good Nazis" made the Ustashas something 2. The film does not mention doctors sent by the Ministry of Health or other activities of the Ministry of the Association. No mention is made of the deceased nuns and other infected children while assisting them. There is no mention that railways and the entire NDH state system are in the rescue. There is no place for Kamilo Bresler, one of the civil servants with an important role in the placement of children 3. The Serbs seek to connect and smuggle in their "truth" with the tragic fate of Jews in World War II 4. Depicts Stepinac as a coward, a shaky and "Ustasha confessor" which is complete nonsense 5. Julije Budisavljevic shows an ID on which he writes "Serb 498", which was, like, issued to him by a state institution, which is a fabrication because it was simply not a practice at the time 6. The fact of Diana's diary that the Orthodox Savo Besarovic, a friend of the state chief, was in the Government of the NDH is overlooked and that later partisans sentenced him to death 7. It is alleged that Diana Budisavljevic was reported to have sent a truckload of goods to the partisans 8. Violence of police agents in Diana Budisavljevic's apartment is being invented, it does not exist in the Dnevnik (Diary) 9. Diana explains to the feldwebel (sergeant) that she is conducting a "private action" of aiding and abetting. A private! In totalitarian NDH? How did the director get away with this praise? 10. One grandmother says, "The hardest part was choosing who would go to the hospital and who to go to Sava!" That with river Sava is one of the worst fabrications from the communist propaganda arsenal, dating back to the Yugoslav era 11. The film's author suggests that Eugene Dide Kvaternik's mother killed herself because she was shaken by what her son was doing to Jews and Serbs. Quaternik's mother, Olga, died on August 31, 1941, and her connection to the Jewishness that the film insinuates is also unclear
In the end, at the check-out of the movie, it says: Diana's file was never found again. This is not entirely true either. In the Croatian National Archives there is a Children's File, which belonged to the Ministry of Association and Caritas. There are about 28,000 cards in 56 drawers with the names of the children cared for during World War II. Diana Budisavljevic, as she writes in her diary, also made copies for the Ministry of Association when drafting her file. Another time, she would transcribe their cards for her records, etc.
Therefore, part of her file can also be reconstructed through archival material, which does not need to be searched for ten years. Part of the data is in the AFZ archive material, also in the Croatian National Archives. This material was kept for years by communist officials such as Marija Bakaric, the wife of Vladimir Bakaric, and thus probably prevented some refugees from finding out in time what happened to their relatives. Now this material is available, but our movie researchers did not have time for it.