The Boys in the Bunkhouse: Servitude and Salvation in the Heartland by Dan Barry, tells the story of a group of intellectually disabled men living in an Iowa bunkhouse and working in a turkey plant for decades. He writes about the struggles and abuse the men faced, and how they were saved. In my opinion, Dan Barry did a good job of informing readers about the Atalissa bunkhouse scandal. He included interviews and insight from different sources, such as the men, who are the main focus of the story, some of the caretakers and people who worked with them, the Atalissa community members, and social workers and investigators involved with the story.…
In this attention grabbing, brillaintly plotted, and elegantly written book, D. T. Max shows us what happens when the insomnia doesn’t end, no matter how aggressive the medical intervention or sedative prescription is. He tells the story of an Italian family that for at least 200 years has been plagued by an extremely rare hereditary disorder that destroys the brain’s capacity to fall asleep. Ultimately, if you stop sleeping altogether, you will probably end up suffering; effects include losing all bodily control and finally a horrible death. Although science may not yet understand the purpose of slumber, fatal familial insomnia, the author suggests, it could be “the worst disease in the world.”…
On the first day, within the first twenty minutes, two men tried to pass off as Russians who were allowed out of the camp to cut down trees while others hid in the trucks full of trees. None of them escaped, but it showed how witty, adventurous and desperate those men were. Another man, Capt. Hilts, one of three Americans at the camp, stepped across the warning wire where we had tossed his baseball to check out a blind spot between the guard towers. His feet were shot at and then he was sent to the cooler, an isolation cell, along with Ives ‘The Mole’, one of the men who attempted escape on…
The title of this book is “Sleeping Freshmen Never Lie.” If the word “lie” from the title was meant to mean “lie down,” the title would be a play on words because you usually lie down when you sleep. So, they are saying that freshmen are too busy doing homework and other schoolwork to lie down and sleep peacefully. If the word “lie” means not telling the truth, then the title would be saying that freshmen who are sleeping never tell lies, which is obvious because you can’t talk when you’re asleep. Scott has lied to Wesley, his dad, and himself. One day, Mr. Franka sent Scott to the office to pick up a file, so he went to the office, sat down and waited for the secretary to get him the file. Later, Wesley arrives at the office because he got…
During the Holocaust, five to six million Jews were killed and some of them were children. Milkweed, “ Until Then I Had Only Read about These Things in Books,” and “ The Guard,” are about children experiencing life during the Holocaust. In these excerpts, the narrator views the Nazis in similar and different ways.…
During the Holocaust, cruelty wasn’t something unfamiliar to the prisoners. As it is shown in the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Natzies didn’t use only one form of cruelty to rule the prisoner's life. When someone talks about their experiences in the camps they never say I was never beaten or my family stayed together the whole time, they say how hard life was and how every day they had to fight the odds to live. Cruelty isn’t always a physical thing, someone can be emotionally cruel to someone else. In this book, Elie gives examples of several cruel things not only the Natzies did but also what the prisoners did to one another.…
The book “Night” and its topic of the concentration camps of Auschwitz and Buchenwald is very essential to the story. Wiesel describes these camps with great detail and emotion which got my attention and curiosity. With the research I have collected I learned that Auschwitz and Buchenwald were two major concentration camps to the Nazis in Germany that were mainly for either executing prisoners or forcing them to work in a variety of different fields. These two camps were known more as complexes due to the many sub camps both Auschwitz and Buchenwald had. Concentration camps were a key to the Nazi’s plan of annihilation of people who they had no interest in, either because of their racial or social qualities. Some examples included Jews, prisoners of war, bisexuals, and the mentally disordered.…
The prisoners were forbidden to speak to anyone but the guards and they weren’t even allow the exchange eye contact with other prisoners. The prisoners would get beaten daily they would be forced to sing and whistle while getting rocks thrown at them. The guards would constantly tease and mentally abuse the prisoners by humiliating them, bringing up past events and make them feel less of a…
During world war II, the people known as, Jews, were targeted for deportation to concentration camps and execution. The term, “Inhumanity” was expressed in many different ways during this period of time. Inhumanity can scar people emotionally and mentally. Inhumane people tend to act very cruel towards other people, animals, and the environment. In the story, “Night” by Elie Wiesel, there were many merciless examples of how inhumanity was shown during World War II.…
Final thought on this is still the same even though there are many ways people could look at these two situations there is still something about it that shows how they are very different from each other so what is that in this perspective the two situations are very different from another. As Adolf Hitler once stated “When I came to power,I did not want the concentration camps to become old age prisoner homes,but instruments of…
When they would go they were issued a small room and a hard mattress.They weren’t able to go outside and if they did, all they saw was barbed wire. There were letters sent back and forth between family members on the outside. One letter was from a young girl that was telling a family friend what life was like in the camp. Many people died in the camps because of the lack of food and care. The kids would sleep in old donkey stalls. Stalls would collapse because the roofs were made of clay. When they collapsed, they would kill the kids. One Man, by the name of Gordon Hirabayashi refused to comply with the relocation order.He was convicted with violating orders, and 90 days in jail. In 1980, Gordon challenged the courts and won. Making history, his case convinced the government to give a public apology. (The Washington Journey) This conflict was political, economic, cultural, sociological, and psychological.Conflict is when two people or more disagree on a topic that can be crucial to how things…
A concentration camp refers to a camp or closed area where people are detained under brutal conditions usually having no access to legal rights of arrest and imprisonment that would normally be accepted in a democracy. Concentration camps played a large part in the mass killing of Jews in Europe lead by Adolf Hitler. An example of a concentration camp is Dachau.…
In conclusion, concentration camps were clearly bad and no place anyone would want to be. These camps were cruel, well put together, and they differed from each other. All of this really happened during the holocaust. It is so awful to think that all these innocent people went through this horrible time. It is truly…
“…Imagine now a man who is deprived of everyone he loves, and at the same…
The most revolting part of a concentration camp is the sheer evil that it takes place. It’s sickening to think of the horrible things these people went through, and what many had to do to survive. It’s even more sad that the majority of people affected were innocent human beings. It’s humbling to hear about especially when comparing it to what we think is a “bad day”.…