White Death - Finnish Sniper Simo Häyhä - Sabaton History 028 [Official] Reaction!

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2021
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Komentáře • 68

  • @ortti8397
    @ortti8397 Před 2 lety +83

    "Russian sneezes"
    Snow: Bless You
    Russian: Oh fu..
    BLAM

    • @Caldera01
      @Caldera01 Před 2 lety +9

      *Terveydeksi
      There, fixed it for you.

  • @MustaLaatta
    @MustaLaatta Před 2 lety +79

    He wa born b4 Soviet Union was established as a country and died after it collapsed... Outlived a country? Ok, that's kinda cool 😎

  • @jukkaviertio6393
    @jukkaviertio6393 Před 2 lety +44

    He did his sniping during finnish winter, he had like 3-4 hours sunlight daily. Moonlight was also helpfull with white snow.

    • @seppoharkkonen5766
      @seppoharkkonen5766 Před 2 lety +3

      as another finn i say thats too much sun. Close the curtains.

  • @AHVENAN
    @AHVENAN Před 5 měsíci +2

    Kinda funny that this video popped up in my recommendations specificaly today, december the 17th 2023, today would have been Simos 118th birthday if he had still been alive, may he rest in peace and all of us finns thank him sincerely for his service to our great nation!

  • @ronnyseffinga7950
    @ronnyseffinga7950 Před 2 lety +9

    thx for doing this awesome story, shared it.... grts. from a dutch cheesehead in Lower Saxony

  • @damienmaynard8892
    @damienmaynard8892 Před 2 lety +24

    31 Finns + Simo vs 5,000+ Russians - the Finns: "Hey, tovarisch! You need more men!" LOL! His name lives on because he was extra-ordinary! When the leader of Finland, Mannerheim, met Hitler, Mannerheim lit up a cigarette knowing that Hitler was rabidly anti-tobacco. When Hitler said nothing about the cigarette Mannerheim knew that Germany needed Finland more than Finland needed Germany! The Finns stopped the Russian advance in 1944 when the Germans could not! A friend of mine in Finland said there are about 250,000 Russian soldiers in Finland - all about 6 feet under the ground! Sisu! - a Finnish word which has no single direct English translation - guts, stoicism, honour, bravery, endurance, persistence, "never-say-die"!!! (Aussies know it as ANZAC-spirit)

  • @christianjuntunen5941
    @christianjuntunen5941 Před 2 lety +2

    It wasnt during his training in the army, it was shooting competitions that he won. 16 times a minute with that gun.
    505 confirmed kills.

  • @vakoniemi
    @vakoniemi Před 2 lety +4

    God bless Finland

  • @janicaven7889
    @janicaven7889 Před 2 lety +2

    Magazine only have 5 shots...so 16 shot in 1 min says it all

  • @sixtuspettersson6059
    @sixtuspettersson6059 Před 2 lety +9

    Check out Simo Häyhä *Deadliest Sniper in Military History* Or/and Sabatons Lauri Törni/Larry Thorn *Soldier of tre Armys* you can CZcams them !
    Btw. My Dad fougth in that war... and i had a same model riffle (Pystykorva/Spit) as Simo had when i did my military service in Finland !! !

  • @peo4989
    @peo4989 Před 2 lety +14

    Cheers from Sweden. I live in a industrial city and we have lots of finnish people living here. A coworker of mine told me 5 years ago about his father that was a finnish jägerinfanterist during ww2 which meant he used bicycles and/or skis to move around. During an engagement on the Karelen isthmus(border region to Russia) his father was ordered along with his batallion to spearhead through a artillery post with bunker fortification connected. They had 5 snipers paving the way for them. I dont know if it was Simo Häyhä but they apparently was good. They used friendly artillery masking their movement and snipers shot look outs. Safe to say the finns were experts in asymmetric warfare at that time. :)

    • @jannemuinonen2180
      @jannemuinonen2180 Před 2 lety

      There are many stories about the legend... but all they were heroes. Otherwise we would speak russian.

    • @0Quiwi0
      @0Quiwi0 Před 2 lety +3

      Don't forget the Swedish volunteers that came to help us and the Swedish families that took our kids under their arm to keep them safe. While we would probably appreciated it more if Sweden joined the war fully, we do appreciate the things you did for us

    • @puuhamato6294
      @puuhamato6294 Před rokem +1

      @@0Quiwi0 There weren't too many "Swedish volunteers" to be honest 😂

    • @SairanBurghausen
      @SairanBurghausen Před 6 měsíci

      @@0Quiwi0Sweden and Norway guaranteed that the western allies couldn't help us. No amount of volunteers can make up for that.

  • @Finkele1
    @Finkele1 Před 2 lety +5

    "what did you feel when you shot enemy?" "recoil"

  • @roccostafford5383
    @roccostafford5383 Před 2 lety +2

    They have in Finnland 4000 extra sniper recruits for the army in 2022.
    Even 15000 or more civillian hunters are following sniper trainings last months.
    They know the Russians wanna try it again with Putin these days.

  • @samihukka4490
    @samihukka4490 Před 2 lety +3

    16 times a minute, and he had to reload twice!

  • @wiktor12385
    @wiktor12385 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you Finland that you are with us.

  • @XtreeM_FaiL
    @XtreeM_FaiL Před 2 lety +2

    Forest is a Finn's second home.
    You goto somebody's home to pick a fight, you will get a bloody nose.

  • @phillee2814
    @phillee2814 Před 2 lety +2

    He would also pour water on the snow in front of his nest, so that loose powder snow would not be kicked up by the muzzle blast when he fired, and his position would remain undetected.
    His biographer Antti Rantamaa (who was his company chaplain and later head of the Finnish Lutheran Church and member of the Finnish parliament, so it would be hard to imagine a more trustworthy source) stated that he could judge the distance to within a metre up to 150M and that rapid-fire of 16 hits from 150M in one minute was not only bolt action but used a 5 round clip which needed manual reloading. In 98 days of active duty between 30th Nov 1939 and 7th Mar 1940, he was credited with 542 kills 259 sniped and the remainder in close action, in temperatures ranging between -40C and -20C (-40F and -2F). That is an average of 5.53 per day. And only the confirmed ones. Shared kills where more than one sniper was involved, are not included either, but being such a highly accurate marksman, it is likely that a high proportion of those should be credited to him as well, but no count is known.

  • @ievazagante5527
    @ievazagante5527 Před 2 lety +12

    And it is not always stressed enough that he achieved his body count in much shorter time than the Russian that comes very close.

    • @ievazagante5527
      @ievazagante5527 Před 2 lety

      Actually one might say that Soviet Union has paid even more (not that they valued human lives) - I am speaking about the Siege of Leningrad. Finns helped Nazis to starve so many people - though Soviet Union did not really care, because the Road of life was used first of all for transport of ammunition. Not bread, or medicine, but ammunition, that's taking into account that communists ordered torch the warehouses with food supplies already at the beginning of the siege.

    • @phillee2814
      @phillee2814 Před 2 lety +1

      98 days total, from 30th November 1939 - 7th March 1940.

    • @De_Lirium
      @De_Lirium Před 2 lety

      @@ievazagante5527 Lmao. Your own communist leaders fed you to the Grim Reaper with no hesitation.

  • @joniahti9714
    @joniahti9714 Před 2 lety +2

    Holy shit! Finland mentioned!! torille!

  • @D-ragon-S
    @D-ragon-S Před 2 lety +1

    Great reaction again. Especially knowing that you have served soo many years.
    Isn't a snipers position to prefer? Compared to close quarter combat?
    Anyway I'm not on the list to be called in anymore, so I can comfortably stay watching CZcams videos... 😂😂
    Much Love 💙💛💙

  • @Alexandros.Mograine
    @Alexandros.Mograine Před 2 lety +13

    who would win?
    500 soviet soldiers, or
    a finnish farmer

  • @Alexandros.Mograine
    @Alexandros.Mograine Před 2 lety +4

    it was so cold during that winter, that sometimes when the russians got hit, they would literally just freeze standing up. sometimes the finns put the soviets on sides of the road as guide signs with their hand pointing to the next village, which demoralized even more soviet soldiers.

  • @christianjuntunen5941
    @christianjuntunen5941 Před 2 lety +2

    Finland about 60 000 dead, Sovjet about 400 000 according to the finish war statistics,

  • @teemup9247
    @teemup9247 Před 2 lety +3

    A great sabaton song about this very war is Winter war/Talvisota, you should check it and thr history out!

  • @Doaria
    @Doaria Před 2 lety +2

    Interesting, amazing story

  • @tuproc61
    @tuproc61 Před 2 lety +2

    Very interesting story!

  • @zanwar2185
    @zanwar2185 Před 2 lety +1

    No bullets fly and smoking snakes Sabaton history 👍

  • @lujalainen1
    @lujalainen1 Před 2 lety +1

    i can imagine that afraid snipers is same kinda afraid when walking to ground and afraid walking mines. can make head grazy in some point when thinking and scare that kinda things in war all the time. of course finland not have anymore anti personal land mines coz well we are stupid sometimes ( fucking tarja halonen) :) thanx to great reaction like always and have lucky new week there.

  • @mursuhillo242
    @mursuhillo242 Před 2 lety +1

    If I had a penny for every single different way Häyhä was pronounced in this video, I'd have half a pound

  • @imthatdude5453
    @imthatdude5453 Před 2 lety

    The Finnish proverb is heard: the forest responds when it shouts

  • @kirmowilen2340
    @kirmowilen2340 Před 2 lety +1

    A common mistake in these. At 1939 when the winter war started Rautjärvi, where Simo Häyhä was living, was not anywhere near the border. Only after the war the new border partly divided also Rautjärvi and Simo had to leave his own home.

    • @danylonazarov
      @danylonazarov Před 2 lety +1

      I think they ment that "now" it is situated near border

  • @jayfromtheredneckriviera7956

    Very interesting love it

  • @eerokivisto5103
    @eerokivisto5103 Před 2 lety +2

    The part two of Uprising is still a great watch.

    • @ronnyseffinga7950
      @ronnyseffinga7950 Před 2 lety +1

      yeah, but not for a music reaction, because it has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with the Warsaw uprising i saw the Sabaton history story of Part two....... it starts with pictures of the streets of Paris France, and the story of the Paris uprising, in the back however you hear Sabaton playing Warsaw uprising ??? so i recommened Highly to spare him (and us) precious lifetime for not doing it, but to choose instead another Sabaton story, so blame it on this dutch cheesehead, living in Germany....... grts. Eero and pls stay safe

  • @markschattefor6997
    @markschattefor6997 Před 2 lety +1

    Now check out why the WINGED HUSARS were so powerfull and how Vienna 1683 relates to New York 2001.

  • @imthatdude5453
    @imthatdude5453 Před 2 lety

    "it is a blessing & a curse that we was born in the North"

  • @anette7283
    @anette7283 Před 11 měsíci

    HayHa was a legend

  • @svendahlsten3132
    @svendahlsten3132 Před 2 lety +1

    We all can shoot a rifle but we all cant bee snipers but we are good hunters in Finland i hawe a m24/30 mosin rifle ☺️☺️🇫🇮🇫🇮

    • @roccostafford5383
      @roccostafford5383 Před 2 lety

      These days they have/had more than 4000 new army snipers and recruits in training because Putin want to invade Finnland again.
      More than 15000 Finnish hunters are busy to practice and train their sniper qualitiy too.
      Busy days in Finnland.

  • @jeroenmiddag1132
    @jeroenmiddag1132 Před 2 lety

    Check out Sabaton No Bullits Fly Story. That one is amazing to?

  • @hannadegerlund3227
    @hannadegerlund3227 Před 2 lety +2

    🇫🇮👊

  • @laujrgensen8485
    @laujrgensen8485 Před 2 lety

    16 shoots ind 1m with a riffel ho hold 5 shoots

  • @ThisTrainIsLost
    @ThisTrainIsLost Před 2 lety

    The dude who spoke first pronounced Simo's name well but, the narrator for whatever reason pronounced his name reasonably decently the first time but became steadily worse as the video goes on. Why? Presumably they both learned Simo's name at the same time. But wtf, nothing depends on it.
    (Btw, he didn't only put snow in his mouth to prevent the vapour puffs, he froze his rifle's barrel to also prevent the escape of visible vapour.
    He didn't "find a new home," the government gave him a farm.
    And the rest of the boo-boos. Like, his total kill count, rifle and machine gun, was 800+. All in 100 days.)

  • @DR_REDACTED
    @DR_REDACTED Před 2 lety +1

    🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮

  • @GugureSux
    @GugureSux Před 2 lety +1

    The narrator's pronunciation of "Häyhä" just hurts my ears.
    Also 5:34 that photo is often used to portray Simo Häyhä, but that's just a staged photo of some random Swedish soldier. Not a Finnish rifle, and Simo didn't use masks.

  • @pekkakoski6595
    @pekkakoski6595 Před 2 lety

    Simo was a basic reservist. But a a tad better shooter than the others :)

  • @beragis3
    @beragis3 Před 2 lety

    Interesting how the Germans got defeated by the Russian Winter, yet Russia also got defeated by the Finnish Winter a mere 2 years earlier.

    • @Ander01SE
      @Ander01SE Před 2 lety

      Well in all fairness the Russians did win. But because Stalin had cleaned out the military ranks of potential rivals, the start of the war went really bad for them with inexperienced officers and poorly equipped troops without winter uniforms. Green / Brown uniforms against the snow background pretty much made them free kills for the Finnish snipers.
      The numbers were ridiculously in Russia's favor though. 2500 aircraft vs about 115, and 2500 tanks vs 60 or so.

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Před 2 lety +3

      @@Ander01SE USSR won the war, but lost the battle.