Where they would make them do hard work, so much that they would die. And if they didn’t died working, either way they would killed them, without a reason. That was the perspective from what the Germans did, however I didn’t knew how hard the Jews fight for their life, and all the things they did outside the concentration camp in order to survive. For example, they even had to cross a lake that was immense, they didn’t know how deep it was going to be, or if there would be something in the water like some type of snake or something. The only thing they wanted was to survive, and they were able to go across the lake, with all the bags and weapons they had. Also how all of them worked together to survive, for instance, when they crossed the lake, they tied all the belts together. Therefore they were able to grab it and go all together, so they wouldn’t get lost, or drown. How the Jews were able to build houses, nurseries, and a school into the woods, and live for more than two years there. They had to overcome many things in order to survive, and they never lost hope. Last of all, this story changed my perspective of the Holocaust, to that the Jews were really strong, all the things they went through, and how they were able to overcome many of their…
Arriving, everyone was told to take all of their clothes to take a shower with a limited time. Lina was slapped by a soviet and screamed at like she was a dog. Being treated like she was worthless and nothing. Put to work, Lina and her family only getting little portions of food to survive each day but only if they complete their work they were ordered. While working like they were ordered one day, to dig holes, a soviet came and told them to get in the holes that they dug, the soviet barking orders shot into the holes but didn’t seem to shoot them actually. Ordered to get out Lina and her mother got out and got their portion of food for the day. Her mother, always positive never seemed to be down. Trying to set good examples to the young kids trying to show them that they would get through this and they would go home but everyone knew they would never escape or be free from this. Being forced to work like slaves many people had gotten sick and ill, thinking that everything was over that they would never go home, back to their normal loving families and lives. Everyone became very…
In the novel All But My Life, Gerda Weissmann faces many ways of oppression. In Bielitz, their town was invaded by the Germans, and that was when all of the heinous crimes against Jews were committed. Before they were deported to concentration camps, their rations were very, VERY strictly cut. They were given arm bands with a star of David, and those human beings with names and families were simply labeled JEW. They were forced to sell all of their precious belongings and move to the basement of their house. Gerda’s brother, Arthur, was sent to the military front, where he would never return. She, herself, was split from her parents and never saw them again. In the concentration camp, Gerda and her friends were treated like nothing more than dirt. They were forced to weave cloth for the very country that was killing her loved ones, as well. The camp that she was in, Marzdorf, was worse than the others. She had to do unimaginable things day and night, with hardly any sleep. Later, she was forced on a 4 month-long death march through Europe, in the middle of the winter. Throughout her teenage and early adult years, Gerda was treated very poorly by the Germans and even her own neighbors during the war.…
Imagine parachutes loaded with chocolate and gum floating down from the heavens. The children of West Berlin deserved the sweet gifts after going through the tragedy of the loss of loved ones and the destruction of their city. Gail Halvorsen was an angel to these children. He delivered candy to the young war survivors. As a young boy Gail Halvorsen would watch beautiful silver airplanes fly high in the sky, going to faraway places. He never imagined that one day he would fly a plane carrying food to the starving boys and girls of West Berlin. Halvorsen arrived in Tempelhof, where he met thirty young children. “Their pride and dignity moved me”, said Lt. Halvorsen. He gave them all he had: two sticks of gum, and that's where the journey began. I firmly believe that Gail Halvorsen is an American leader that influenced many lives in Berlin after World War II.…
Born in 1934, Elisabeth Schiesser lived a hard life right from the start. THESIS Her journey started in Yugoslavia with her family of 7 and a normal life. It was her home until it was taken over by Hitler’s army on April 6 1941. The Germans invaded and changed everything. All the men were forced to fight for Nazi army. After the war Elisabeth’s family was forced into a concentration camp along with many other families. After three years of being trapped they escaped and headed for their next destination. They crossed the border into Austria with the help of a civilian, as they did not have the proper papers. Later on, at the young age of 19 she left with a friend to Canada and started a new life. In order to get through the war, Elizabeth and…
Through mud, grass, manure, and more my cowgirl boots tell the story of a girl named Jessica Bronner. The turquoise stitching that runs up and down the sides of the boot fade to a brown as they reach the bottom from the many mud-wars and dirt they’ve encountered. Her favorite color, turquoise, lines inside walls like crystal blue waters. The inner calf is rubbed and worn from the countless hours brushing against the inside of her pant leg and saddle. Water-stains line the bottom of each sole from puddle jumping and late nights in the wet grass. Beat up and scratched are the toes; from kicking rocks, horse hooves, and rowdy games. The heals are chipped and tattered from dancing on old dirt roads and barn floors. Flipping and spinning, whirling…
On September 1st 1939, the Nazis had invaded Poland. The life of the 15 year old girl, Clara Kramer, wasn't ever bound to be the same again. Clara Kramer was a typical Polish teenager from a small town named Zolkiew where thousands of Jews resided. At the sudden uproar of World War II. Clara and her family decided it was a good idea to go into hiding. They were taken in by a family called the Becks, a Volksdeutsche (ethnically German) family from their town. Mrs. Beck was a Catholic woman who worked as Clara's family's housekeeper. Mr. Beck was known to be an alcoholic and a prominent anti-Semite. When Mr. Beck heard the news of how Jews were being slaughtered and sent into camps, Beck sheltered the Kramers and two other Jewish family…
In 1933 events took place that would change the lives of millions of people living in Europe forever. Hitler started his reign as Chancellor of Germany, and with that came the start of what is known as the Holocaust. Around 11,000,000 people were killed in a time period of only 12 years, victims of Hitler’s concentration and death camps. Chaim and Selma Engel are two people that managed to survive one of the worst death camps and made it through the war. Through the evil they witnessed and the struggles they endured, their love was what kept them going. Their love for each other gave them hope, even when all hope seemed lost.…
Body Paragraph #1: Rosa Marie Burger Body Paragraph #2: Body Paragraph #3: Concluding Sentence: "Holocaust Survivors." Holocaust Research Project. Holocaust Education…
One of the hardest struggles occurred during the 1900. This struggle was none other than the holocaust. In this piece of writing you will learn of the hardships that a little 13 year old girl faced during hiding from the Nazi regime. This girl stayed with her family and another family as well in the little annex that had little to no room in general and for two families. The lack of food was another hardship since they had so many people and little food that they weren’t able to eat as much as they wanted, in addition, they ate small portions a day just imagine that not being able to eat as much as you want. In addition, one of the members of the other family was stealing food at night for himself and was making everyone…
Manya Perel was imprisoned in a ramdom ghetto in April 1941 and then later then deported to several concentration and death camps including Ravensbrück, Plaszow, Rechlin, Gundelsdorf, and Auschwitz. She completed hard labor and nearly starved to death. Mayna on some days only ate a crumb of bread a day. Despite the horrible living conditions, scarce food rations and the constant threat of the gas chambers and death, Manya risked her life to save others. Her bravery, in the face of such hardship, is an inspiration to others.…
I was sitting with my family at the breakfast table drinking milk and eating a piece of burnt toast; that was when I heard the feint sound of sirens coming from the east end of the block. My dads face grew pale and my mother quickly stood up and grabbed my brother and mines hand. She guided us towards the back of the house through a small opening in the floor. Once we reached the hole, she took my brothers hand and placed it in mine, telling him to watch over me. We were put into the hole and she kissed our heads, then covered the little light we had with a rug. I started to panic, unaware of the destruction and persecution that lay before me on a silver platter. We spent a week in that ditch, although it had felt like a lifetime. All the while, I thought of my parents: where had they gone; would they soon return? One day while we were there, with cramps building up in my legs, I heard footsteps coming from above my head. My brother hoping it was our parents returning to save us from the forever darkness that we faced slid the rug over and peered up with squinting eyes. The rough man standing above us, however, was not our father, but a man I would soon come to know as, Nazi soldier. The reasons of our taking were not because of crime, but because of my ethnicity, the way I looked, the way I spoke, and even my religion.…
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…
In the novel “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Elie Wiesel tells the story of his life in the Auschwitz concentration camps. Mr. Wiesel was born in the town of Sighet, Transylvania and was only a teenager when he and his family were taken from their home he called the “ghetto”. Although they all had been worn by Moishe the Beadle, about his terrible story in which no one believed him and though he was a mad man. Nevertheless the Germen army arrived shortly, and all Jews where obligated to wait outside until there train was to come for them and take them. Once in the train arrived and it was there; soon it was Elie Wiesel and his family turn to get, on lying down was not an option or even siting down. The air was little and there was little food and thirst became a big problem as so did the heat. Then the train stop in Kaschau in Czechoslovakia and a German officer stepped in and told all the Jews in the train that they were know under the German army authority and to give them all there gold and silver. The Jews where treated like dogs and threaten to get shot if anyone went missing. After that the train continued to its destination, with in the train there was a woman named Mrs. Schachter a woman in here fifties started to cry out “Fire! I see a fire! I see a fire!” she did this many times and the Jews got tired of it after a while so the beat her, so she would stop crying. Once they arrived to their final destination Auschwitz she scram fire for the last time, but this time there was fire and shortly everyone had to get off the train the air smelled like burning flesh. After getting off Elie Wiesel was separated from his mother and sisters with he never saw again but stayed with his father. After separated Elie Wiesel saw as children and old where being burned and hoped it was all just a dream. Elie Wiesel was close to being thrown in the fire pit, but instead him and his father where forced to run to the showers and then to Block 17 where…
As the book is coming to a close Gerda writes, “As I Finish the last chapter of my book, I feel at peace, at last. I have discharged a burden and paid a debt to many nameless heroes, resting in their unmarked graves.” A burden is a heavy load and Gerda definitely had one to get off her shoulders. Up until this book Gerda was never able to tell anyone her full journey. She wasn’t able to share the times spent with the friends she made during the hardships of the Holocaust. The debt she paid to many nameless heroes was that she was able to get the story out to people. Gerda was able to share first hand experiences to people that just may not understand the fight these young girls and other Jewish people put up during these years.…