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    <loc>https://www.crreo.ai/showcase/14037278-4f42-4abb-bfda-4b9ab938d3a0</loc>
    <lastmod>2026-04-29T04:57:06.011Z</lastmod>
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      <video:title><![CDATA[Global War in Minutes: A Brief History of World War II]]></video:title>
      <video:description><![CDATA[0:00 William appears on screen, cream sweatshirt, calm: “You’ll get six years of global history in eleven minutes. Start small: after World War I, the Treaty of Versailles crushed Germany’s economy and pride — fertile ground for leaders like Hitler.” Visuals: maps, crowds.

0:30 You learn 1939: Blitzkrieg into Poland sparks Britain and France’s declarations. Fast maps and tanks.

1:20 1940: Europe falls fast; France collapses, Britain stands alone — RAF dogfights defend the skies.

2:30 1941: Hitler invades the USSR. Winter and stretched supply lines turn momentum.

3:30 Pearl Harbor pulls the United States in. The war becomes global.

4:30 Turning points: Stalingrad, North Africa, island hopping in the Pacific push back Axis forces.

5:30 D-Day: Normandy landings open Western Europe’s liberation.

6:00 Collapse: Berlin falls, Hitler dies, Germany surrenders.

6:30 Atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki end Japan’s fight. September 1945: surrender.

6:50 William closes: “The war reshaped borders, power, and led to the UN — its lessons still matter.”]]></video:description>
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      <video:publication_date>2026-04-29T04:57:06.011Z</video:publication_date>
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  <url>
    <loc>https://www.crreo.ai/showcase/82c3ac2b-9288-412e-94e3-66693485da56</loc>
    <lastmod>2026-04-29T05:43:21.016Z</lastmod>
    <video:video>
      <video:title><![CDATA[Chain Reaction: The Great War Unraveled]]></video:title>
      <video:description><![CDATA[
One assassination… started a war that changed the world forever.

In 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand was killed — and Europe’s alliances dragged nations into war.

What followed was a deadly stalemate — soldiers trapped in trenches, surrounded by mud, fear, and constant fire.

New weapons made it worse — machine guns, poison gas, and tanks changed warfare forever.

In 1917, everything shifted — the U.S. joined the fight, while Russia dropped out after revolution.

By 1918, Germany was exhausted and surrendered. The war ended — but the consequences were just beginning.

The Treaty of Versailles punished Germany harshly… fueling anger that would lead to World War II.

And it all started… with one assassination.]]></video:description>
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      <video:publication_date>2026-04-29T05:43:21.016Z</video:publication_date>
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  <url>
    <loc>https://www.crreo.ai/showcase/8606bde5-5f5b-4ea5-a39d-0041f12e8352</loc>
    <lastmod>2026-04-29T06:26:02.676Z</lastmod>
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      <video:title><![CDATA[Echoes of Atrocity]]></video:title>
      <video:description><![CDATA[What you’re about to hear lasted years… but most people only know fragments.
During World War II, Nazi Germany carried out one of history’s most systematic atrocities: the Holocaust.
Six million Jewish men, women, and children were murdered. But they were not the only victims. Millions more—including Romani people, disabled individuals, political prisoners, and others—were also targeted.
People were taken from their homes, transported in overcrowded trains, and sent to camps like Auschwitz, Treblinka, and Sobibor.
Many were forced into labor. Others were killed immediately in gas chambers designed for mass execution.
Families were separated. Names were replaced with numbers. Lives were reduced to statistics.
This wasn’t chaos. It was organized. Planned. Industrial.
And it happened not in ancient history—but within the lifetime of our grandparents.
The Holocaust is a reminder of what can happen when hatred is normalized and humanity is ignored.
So the question is—how do we make]]></video:description>
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      <video:publication_date>2026-04-29T06:26:02.676Z</video:publication_date>
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