• last year
Saviez-vous qu'il y avait une femme qui est descendue avec le Titanic et a vécu pour raconter l'histoire ? Elle s'appelait Violet Jessop et elle était hôtesse sur le navire. Lorsque le Titanic a percuté l'iceberg, elle a aidé les passagers à rejoindre les canots de sauvetage mais s'est retrouvée dans l'eau glacée lorsque son canot a été aspiré sous l'eau. Incroyablement, elle a été ramenée en sécurité et a survécu avec seulement un coup à la tête. Voici la partie incroyable : Violet a également survécu à deux autres catastrophes maritimes, y compris le naufrage du Britannic pendant la Première Guerre mondiale. Les gens ont commencé à l'appeler « Mademoiselle Insurbmersible » car rien ne pouvait la faire couler ! 🛳️ Animation créée par Sympa. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Musique par Epidemic Sound https://www.epidemicsound.com Pour ne rien perdre de Sympa, abonnez-vous!: https://goo.gl/6E4Xna​ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nos réseaux sociaux : Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sympasympacom/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sympa.officiel/ Stock de fichiers (photos, vidéos et autres): https://www.depositphotos.com https://www.shutterstock.com https://www.eastnews.ru ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Si tu en veux encore plus, fais un tour ici: http://sympa-sympa.com

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Transcript
00:00We have heard a lot of information about this terrible tragedy that happened on the night of April 14, 1912.
00:08What really caused the disaster?
00:11Could the passengers of the Titanic have been saved?
00:13Was the ship cursed?
00:15All these questions remain unanswered.
00:18Also, today, we will not focus on the tragic aspect of this event,
00:23but on the fantastic stories of the people who miraculously managed to survive it and what they became afterwards.
00:31As you know, when the Titanic crashed on an iceberg,
00:35the crew of the ship first evacuated the women and children.
00:38But among the passengers, a woman remained on board and she survived the sinking of the ship.
00:45Her name was Rhoda Abbott.
00:47She and her two sons had been living in England for two years,
00:49but they had decided to go home, to Providence, Rhode Island.
00:54Rhoda had therefore bought three third-class tickets for the most modern and most insubordinate ship of the time.
01:01The whole family slept in her cabin during this dark night from April 14 to 15.
01:06They did not feel the shakes and only got up when the steward knocked on the door.
01:10He asked them to put on life jackets and go to the upper deck.
01:15Then, with other third-class passengers, they lined up to board the lifeboats.
01:21The crew members allowed only the women and children to go further.
01:26The brothers had to negotiate with the crew to be able to accompany their mother to the boat.
01:31They all got on the last boat,
01:33but the crew asked the sons to leave their seats to the women who had not yet been evacuated.
01:38Rhoda did not want to leave her sons, so she decided to stay with them.
01:42She came down from the canoe and held her sons in her arms.
01:45At that moment, the hull of the ship began to darken.
01:49The deck was tilting.
01:50Rhoda tried to hold her sons, but in vain.
01:53She slipped off the deck and fell into the icy water.
01:56From there, she joined the lifeboat that had been taken by the deck while swimming.
02:01Rhoda climbed aboard and watched the Titanic sink into the water.
02:05Unfortunately, she could not save her two sons.
02:08Apart from her, there were 13 people on the canoe.
02:11But in the end, no one survived except Rhoda.
02:15A few hours later, the Carpathian ship arrived,
02:18and its crew found our friend almost frozen in the canoe.
02:22The ship arrived almost three days later in New York,
02:25where Rhoda was hospitalized and where she stayed for about two weeks.
02:29Swimming in the cold water gave her asthma,
02:32and she suffered from it all her life.
02:35Later, she admitted not to have any regrets for refusing to leave with the other women.
02:40Because she could have spent a little more time with her sons.
02:46Violette Jessop is another survivor of the Titanic disaster.
02:50She had embarked on the ship not as a passenger, but as an employee.
02:54She had been hired by the White Star Line,
02:57which was looking for people to serve the rich customers of the new luxury deck.
03:01On April 10, after an interview, Violette boarded the Titanic.
03:06The first few days of work went smoothly until the disaster.
03:10At first, no one panicked.
03:13People didn't want to believe that the insubservient ship could sink.
03:17But while we were chatting on the upper deck,
03:20the water was invading the hull.
03:23Violette, with other employees, helped the people evacuate.
03:27One of the ship's captains ordered her to go first in the canoe
03:30to show the others that there was no danger.
03:33She obeyed and spent several hours on board,
03:36until the rescuers came to pick up the survivors.
03:39But the most exciting thing in this story is that before the Titanic,
03:43Violette had already had a shipwreck.
03:46The ship where she worked as a hostess had collided with another ship,
03:50in the middle of the sea.
03:52Everyone had been saved,
03:54and Violette had gotten a job on the Titanic a few years later.
03:58But even after this second and famous shipwreck,
04:00she didn't change her profession and got a job on the British hospital ship.
04:04And you know what?
04:05He sank too.
04:07Violette survived for the third time,
04:09and she was apparently not traumatized.
04:12After all these events, she continued to work on other ships.
04:16All these events highly value the nickname of Miss Insubservient.
04:22One of the Titanic's most courageous passengers
04:25was the ship's chef, Charles Jouguin.
04:28On the night of April 14th,
04:30he woke up after the collision with the iceberg.
04:33During the few hours during which the ship sank under the water,
04:36Charles helped the passengers.
04:38He first ordered his bakers to supply all the rescue boats with food,
04:43then he lent a strong hand for the evacuation.
04:46He was one of the last people to stay on the ship
04:49once all the boats were in the water.
04:51And he continued to save lives.
04:53He threw long chairs in the water so that people could sit on them.
04:57Then, when half of the Titanic sank,
05:00he went down into the icy water,
05:02where he noticed a chipped rescue boat.
05:05He got on board and waited a few hours for the rescuers to arrive.
05:10But the most incredible thing was that he was doing very well
05:13when Carpathia appeared.
05:15He had no scratches and was not suffering from hypothermia.
05:20Among the survivors of the Titanic
05:23was also Margaret Brown,
05:25known as the insubordinate Molly Brown.
05:29She had visited a friend in England with her daughter.
05:32But when she learned that her little son was sick,
05:35she immediately bought a ticket to go to New York on board the Titanic.
05:39After the collision with the iceberg,
05:41Margaret bravely helped people evacuate the ship
05:44until the stewards forced her to get on a canoe.
05:47And she continued to take care of others
05:49until the arrival of the lifeboat, the Carpathia.
05:52Margaret then created a committee of survivors
05:55and raised about $10,000.
05:57At the time, it was a considerable amount.
06:00For many years, she protected and supported the survivors of the Titanic,
06:04who were in a precarious financial situation.
06:07Margaret also contributed to the construction
06:10of the Titanic Memorial in Washington.
06:13A rich English businessman, G. Bruce Ismay,
06:16was also on board the Titanic.
06:18However, his shipwreck was not the end of his misdeeds.
06:21He managed to jump into the last channel 20 minutes
06:24before the Titanic was completely submerged.
06:27He thus managed to survive,
06:29but he was sentenced to eternal contempt.
06:32Once on the continent,
06:33the newspapers began to talk about him as the Titanic's worst coward.
06:37Some articles even accused him of having sunk the ship.
06:41Ismay was a manager of the White Star Line company
06:44that had designed the Titanic.
06:46According to some press articles,
06:48the businessman had asked the captain to sail faster.
06:51He wanted the ship to arrive in America earlier than expected.
06:55He would thus receive the praise of public opinion.
06:58And the consequence was, of course,
07:00that the ship crashed at high speed against an iceberg
07:03and that its hull was damaged.
07:05No one could prove the guilt of the businessman.
07:08Almost all the criticisms against him
07:10had been published in a single newspaper.
07:12His publisher had argued with the businessman just before the tragedy,
07:16he seemed to have decided to destroy his reputation.
07:19Great Britain organized an independent investigation
07:22which concluded that Ismay had done nothing wrong.
07:25Of course, he had jumped into the last channel,
07:28but only after all the women and children had been evacuated.
07:32However, the investigation did not allow to wash Ismay's reputation.
07:36In England and America,
07:38many friends and colleagues turned away from him.
07:41For many years, Ismay compensated the families
07:44who had lost a loved one on the Titanic.
07:49The most famous passengers of the Titanic
07:51were the members of an orchestra of eight musicians.
07:54At first, no one panicked after the terrible collision with the iceberg.
07:59Many refused to board the canoes
08:01because it seemed to them that they were safer on the Titanic.
08:05Others were convinced that the ship's breakdown would soon be repaired.
08:09Some did not believe that the ship could sink.
08:12But the panic settled when everyone realized that the disaster was imminent.
08:17To calm people down,
08:19eight musicians from two ensembles began to play music.
08:23The survivors say that the orchestra played until the end.
08:27The fear and the gravity of the situation did not disconcert these brave men.
08:31Unfortunately, they did not escape it,
08:33but their memory remained forever engraved in history.
08:37And their musical instruments are now famous objects around the world
08:41and articles of great value in auction houses.

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