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…
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.…
This site gives information about how she survived in the holocaust in 1942. Eva talks about how scary it was for her to survive. For her to stay safe she stayed in an attic for a while, Then went to a cattle train and that’s when Eva jumped off the train and ran away before she had gotten shot by the jews, she walked the woods to stay safe and she ended up at the station, which is where she stayed for a couple of nights to stay safe.…
The Holocaust was a traumatizing and depressing time period in history due to the Nazis in the leadership of their dictator Adolf Hitler. The Nazis were a Political Party during World War ΙΙ from 1941 through 1945. Many Jews during this time were discriminated, murdered, and humiliated in front of many other Jews and Germans. “Six million Jews died in a merciless way at the hands of the Nazis” (Sherbok 1). The Holocaust is an unforgettable period in history that left a scar on many Jews including Vladek. Vladek was a Jew and a survivor of the Holocaust that experienced and witnessed several tragedies during this time. The war was over when his son Art Spiegelman is willing to write a book about the Holocaust. He asked his father Vladek if he could help him write his book by telling him his story and experiences during this time, Vladek agrees. Due to the Holocaust and unforgettable experiences Vladek went through, his life was never the same, he changed a lot in the manner of being more careful with money and resourceful with the things he had. Vladek also became very strict with his son Art Spiegelman and had a very strong character this is reasonable because as a young man he went through a crisis by going to the war at a young age, lost his wife and first son. The Holocaust definitely changed his style of living and his personality that led to a lot of consequences.…
The Holocaust destroyed 11,000,000 people's lives. It’s hard to imagine people being killed just because of their religion. Men, women, the elderly, children; all Jewish families were separated. In his book “Night”, Elie Wiesel, who was separated from his mother and sister, describes his experiences and the inhumane conditions he endured at the concentration camps at the hand of German officers. As a result of his experiences during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel changes from a religious, sensitive little boy to a spiritually dead, unemotional man.…
In the memoir “Night” by Elie Wiesel, a young Jewish boy during the time of the Holocaust talks about all of his experiences during these horrific events and everything that he has gone through, being stripped from everything but his father and barely managing to survive everyday in the harsh conditions. He was separated from his family and from his friends too, most of whom he will not see after the first separation of men and women, ever. Elie, through all that he faces, changes from a sensitive young boy to a callous young man from before the holocaust to after his experiences in all the concentration camps.…
The book Elli: Coming of Age in the Holocaust provides much information on what happened during this time. It is a biography by Livia E. Bitton Jackson. Livia Jackson was thirteen when she was taken to Auschwitz. After liberation, she completed high school in displaced person camps in Germany. In 1951, she traveled to the U.S. on a refugee ship and completed her higher education, later receiving a Ph.D. from N.Y.U. Since, she has taught at several colleges and became Professor of Judaic Studies at Herbert H. Lehman College of The City University of New York. She later married, and made her home in Israel, where she currently teaches at Tel Aviv University. This is her first book.…
During the Holocaust, over 11 million people were killed. 1.1 million were children and 6 million were Jewish. In the novel titled, “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he speaks about a young boy named Elie Wiesel. This novel also explained his thoughts/feelings during the tragic event. During, Elie Wiesel lost his mother when the Holocaust started and lost his father at the end of the Holocaust. Three qualities that contributed to Wiesel’s survival was his intelligence, when he hid his left arm, his bravery, when he refused to separate from his father during the selection, and his determination, when he decided to not stop running during the flee.…
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.…
All Holocaust survivors suffered during and after the horrid event. Whether they lost their families, or their riches, every survivor has a story to tell along with something to learn from it. This specific survivor was a girl named Charlotte Guthmann Opfermann whose family was captured and deported when she was seventeen. Her family was sent to a concentration camp and her father was killed upon entry because he was a well known Jew. Her brother survived many camps and was finally killed just before the liberation of Auschwitz.…
Niewyk’s third and fourth chapters presents the different arguments scholars have when discussing both the victims’ life during the Holocaust and the Jewish resistance. Within the third chapter “The Victims’ Experiences,” Niewyk introduces Bruno Bettelheim, Terrence Des Pres, Primo Levi, and Zoë Vania Waxman, intellectuals who “give us a sense of the variety of what were…many millions of Holocaust experiences.” Within the fourth chapter “The Problem of Jewish Resistance,” Niewyk compiles the arguments of Raul Hilberg, Yehuda Bauer, and Dan Diner, all of whom discuss why they believe the Jewish people “yielded to their fate with minimal resistance.” Bruno Bettelheim’s argument revolves around how the prisoners themselves changed.…
There are many novels and films that have be created to portray the stories of Holocaust victims, two examples being the film Life is Beautiful and the graphic novels Maus I and Maus II. Life is Beautiful tells the story of Guido, a Jewish man in Italy before the war. He fell in love with Dora, a beautiful teacher, and eventually married her and had a son, Giosue. As the Nazis took over, Guido, Dora and Giosue were taken to a concentration camp, where Guido does everything he can to keep his family alive. Maus I and II are graphic novels portraying the true story of a survivor written by his son. They tell the story of Vladek and Anja, in Poland before the war when they fell in love and had a son, Richieu. It tells their journey through the ghettos and Auschwitz to their freedom. As they deal with the hardships from the Nazis, Vladek does whatever it takes to protect his…
Brainwashed, heartless Nazis. Many believe these were the kind of men who were involved in the Holocaust, which makes it much easier to dismiss them and believe we could never become like them. However, this was not truly the case for many of those who participated in the Holocaust. These men were not brainwashed, and some were not even Nazis— they were simply ordinary men.…
The resistance would interrupt germany's weapon shipments to the front line.The partisans were a big role model for jews to join them in the fight against germany.Partisans were like superman an inspiration to all that their is hope.In the holocaust germany planned to kill all the jews they saw but they had minor setbacks with the partisans ,and russians.these heroes saw germany's wicked ways ,and rose to fight for germany's reign to end.…
I was incredibly fortunate to attend the event which took place on May 29th, 2013 in which Sol Berger gave his testimony to his experiences as a holocaust survivor. Though there are copious amounts of amazing, and incredibly eye opening information I would love to share, I could not condense it to a page alone, but will keep the story close to heart and memory for a long time. Sol, born Solomon Berger was born on October 28th, 1919 in the town of Krosno, Poland. He was the second youngest, or the 8th of 9 children. His father was a tailor in Poland, and it may have been this trade alone which may have saved their lives.…