All the Jewish employees were arrested and sent off to a camp. They were sent to a Dutch concentration camp in Vught. They were forced to work under many hard and harsh circumstances. Over 3,000 prisoners including the Jewish employees from the Phillips Corporation were put to at one of the Philips operation plants. The works that worked there were given extra rations of food and were given extra special privilege, so they could live with their wives and children. When a representatives from Philips Corporation came up to Mrs. Hornemann and told her that they the company could guarantee her family’s safety at the camp, but only if she and her kids were to join their dad at the camp. She felt that she had no choice but to go, and support her husband and their…
Once the Holocaust started, more changes seemed to come to the Jewish religion. The changes started affecting everything in peoples’ lives from the clothing they wore to the time they had to be home. The changes became stricter and started to develop into laws. The laws said that all Jewish people had to wear the Star of David on their clothing. Another was that all Jewish people had a curfew and if someone was out after curfew, they were put in prison or could be put to death. In addition to The Star of David that Jews had to wear, a new decree was enforced where all Jewish men had to register with the Nazis. Alicia’s father had to go to register with the Nazi soldiers. When the Jewish men went to register the Nazi soldiers would kill them. Alicia’s father was one of the hundreds of men that was killed while registering.…
When the Germans occupied Cracow, Bronislaw, the son of Rose and David Honig , was four years old. His father David was a hardware store salesman and his mother Rose was a dressmaker. With his parents working, Bronislaw’s grandmother stayed home to take care of him.…
The book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, by Rebecca Skloot covers multiple topics regarding legal, cultural, and medical issues in health care through the story of Henrietta Lacks, her children, and her immortal cells.…
It would be fair to say Sasha Kramer has a potty mouth. Almost since arriving in Haiti over ten years ago,…
In March 11, 1938 the Chancellor of Austria resigned and gave the country over to Hitler. The next day it was not the same because of Hitler. In school they made the Jewish kids get off their chairs and then they washed them. Her father could not work as a doctor. The Nazis made more rules against the Jews. They were being arrested and killed. Julie’s mom killed herself. Julie her brother and her father were very sad. Her aunt Clare gave her invite to New York . She was sad her brother and father are not coming .HER dad explained to her why they are not going. SO she went to the ship to New York .When she came to New York she was treated well. They went to the mall to buy clothes to wear because all her clothes smelled like fish. Her Aunt and her Uncle were very nice to her.…
Alicia lived in the city of Buczacz with her parents and her older brothers Zachary, Bunio, Moshe, and her young brother Herzl. They lived happily until her brother Zachary was beaten by Polish boys for being Jewish. Later on while waiting for her father at the candy store she overheard two men talking about the Germans plans to take over the other countries. Then the Russians came into her town and bought all of their goods, controlled the school system, and etc. When the Russians offered the people to go to a Russian school in Leningrad Alicia’s brother Moshe took the opportunity and went to school there. He later on escaped and explained that the school forced them to work at the fields, chose what to say in their letters, and took the supplies their families send them. When the Russians put him in prison for escaping the school Moshe died from food poisoning. The Russians left the city once the German occupation took over and the police station was hiring officers to meet with the Germans. Alicia’s father took the offer but he died because it turns out it was a trap set up by the Germans. Alicia’s family was forced to move to a ghetto by the Germans. They couldn’t go to any public places or they would go to prison or get killed. Later on Alicia’s brother Bunio was captured while getting firewood and is in a work camp. They were able to send food to him for some time until he gets free. One day while visiting a friend’s house the Germans officers ordered them to leave the house and to get on the train. While in the train a couple of men found an escape for children and Alicia was able to get out…
Marion was in the Holocaust camps from the ages three to ten so she didn’t have a lot of work to do like the teenagers and adults. Everyday she looked for four identical pebbles which represented each of her family members surviving. She had the idea because her brother, Albert, said that no two pebbles were the same let alone four (Lazan and Perl, 8). Once at Appell, a German soldier snuck an apple to Albert. “This act of kindness by a German soldier was like a flicker of light in the darkness and made our bleak existence more bearable, at least for the moment,” Marion says as she recalls that day in Appell (Lazan and Perl, 65). The hope of many Jews helped them to always look on the brighter side and eventually survive the Holocaust.…
The House On Mango Street and “ Only Daughter” both prove that being an Mexican- American women is a struggle. As Cisneros shows her first hand experience, and as well shows it through story telling. Yet without telling a biography and going straight to the point she shows emotion by using literary elements. Sandra Cisneros Chose to use metaphors and imagery to express the hard ships of being a Mexican- American women. If Sandra Cisneros did not use literary elements to show the lifestyle of a Mexican-American women, the points that she showed in both the texts would not have been as powerful as they were.…
true story. It tells of the experience of Blima Weisstuch, a Jewish girl in Poland, between the years 1936 and 1947. To a reader today, those words—Jews, 1940s, Poland—may not suggest anything particular. But to someone who lived through those years, the words evoke shudders of horror. For during that era, Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party were rising to power in Europe. As Blima herself says, “[The Nazis] had some plan they talked about in these smoke-filled clubs, a plan for the country, the world. A plan which did not include Jews.” In order to understand the nightmare that overtook Blima and her family, some background information is helpful.…
Born in October of 1923, Grese grew up in an ordinary, agricultural German family with four other siblings. As usual, she attended school with her siblings and helped with the household chores. In contrast, Grese’s adolescent years were not in her favor and marked a definite period of change. She was quite enthralled with the Nazi youth organization her father highly disapproved of, the League of German Girls . Later, her mother reportedly committed suicide by drinking hydrochloric acid in 1936 due an affair committed by her father. Two years later, in 1938, Grese’s poor academic performance leads her to leave school and her father’s home at age fifteen in search for work instead. Her first employment was six months at an agricultural farm before working at a hospital. Upon entering the hospital, Grese knew she desired to become a trained nurse and work there permanently. Despite her hard work, the German Labor Exchange denied her request and removed her from the hospital after two years . Once again, Grese found herself relocated and employed at another farm. Although discouraged, she did not protest her employment at the dairy farm and persistently reapplied to become a nurse. Her efforts were rejected a second time in 1942 and was being transferred once more. Only this time, Grese objected the Labor Exchange’s decision to send her away. Irma Grese, now nineteen years old and without a family, quietly left after much deliberation to a job at Ravensbruck Concentration…
Throughout history families have been negatively impacted due to political oppression. Similarly in the case of The Chrysalids families that have a member with a deformity, are often forced to either kill their loved one or move to the fringes. The religious prejudice that people have on blasphemies, changed the life of Sophie Wender; a young girl that has six toes since birth. Sophie was forced to leave Waknuk and start a new life in the fringes, after her secret was revealed. Negatively changing her entire family’s lifestyle. This incident is identical to the holocaust. Near the early 1940s many Jews went into hiding for years, trying to save themselves and their families from the wrath of the Nazi’s. This had a negative impact on their lives, similar to Sophie, as they were forced to leave their homes and start a new life from nothing. Both cases show how lives change when a family is forced to flee into hiding.…
Imagine if you were put in a place where the fate of a man’s life was placed in the palm of your hand. The Hubermanns were lucky enough to make this unfortunate decision and it was placed on their doorstep in the middle of the night. They weren’t warned about this happening and had no intention of taking anyone in beforehand, but the warm hearts of the Hubermanns allowed Max to intrude into their lives. The only problem with this, Max was a Jew. All Jews were shamed, despised, and spit on during the reign of the Third Reich and Max was no exception. But the courage of the Hubermanns and their care and acceptance for everyone broke through this fear and opened up their hearts for this man. Of course they took in account of the fact that if anyone found the Jewish man hiding in their basement, there would be severe consequences for the family. During that time, if a Nazi discovered a family who was hiding a Jew in their…
I think the author Morris Gleitzman had a particular reason for writing this story, because, the story was based on when the German’s invaded Poland and captured the Jews and sent them to death camps.…
Graphic Designer is Paula Scher; I did research on her background. I know what she did and where she came from. I leaned what she have done in the past and the present. Here are the things I can up with in my paper. Paula Scher, born October 6, 1948 in Washington, DC, as an American graphic designer, illustrator, painter and art educator in design, and the first female principal at Pentagram, which she joined in 1991. Paula was married in 1973 to Mr. Chwast. She began her career as an art director in the 1970s and early '80s, when her eclectic approach to typography became highly influential. Her graphic identities for Citibank and Tiffany & Co. have become case studies for the contemporary regeneration of classic American brands.…