The book The Nazi Hunters by Neal Bascomb is a nonfiction book based on the aftermath of World War 2. It follows the story of Adolf Eichmann, one of the highest ranking Nazis and so called architect of the Wehrmacht/Nazi strategy. The book gives the reader an insight of Eichmann’s background story as one of the leaders of The Final Solution. Nazi Hunters also tells the reader what happened in the aftermath of the war and the fall of the Third Reich regarding Eichmann. Believing in Argentina’s promises of protecting Nazi refugees he decides to start a new life there with his family following shortly afterward. In May 1960, after 15 years of evading the Nazi Hunters, he is kidnapped at a bus stop in Argentina by Israeli spies. Once captured, he is smuggled out of the country and sent to Israel where he would face his trial. Adolf Eichmann would be eventually executed in 1961.…
Erik Brandt is a 16 year old half Russian half German boy. He is in a program called Jungend which is also known as Hitler's Children Army. It is like Boy Scouts for German Kids. They boys in the Jungend are also enlisted soldiers who have to fight when it is needed. One day Erik is sent to fight in the war. He is shipped to the eastern front where the Germans have to fight Russia on Russian soil. Erik is uncomfortable because he is half Russian and German. He was aware of the things Germans were doing to Jews but he was convinced it was right and that Jews were preventing Germany's world domination. While traveling to Russia he becomes acquainted with some other boys in his platoon named Oskar, Jakob, and Fassnacht. They get attacks by aircraft and very few of the Germans die but the boys are pretty scared. When they reach their destination they go into the trenches and prepare to fight. Their commander explains the plan and teaches them how to use certain equipment like mines and grenades. When the first waves of Russians attack it is mainly infantry foot soldiers. The Germans win and Erik thinks it’s over and he is exhausted and tired. Then their commander says that was the easy one and tells them to prepare for tanks to start progressing. In the second wave the Germans start to drop and German hope looks lost. Erik is hit by a grenade and he is hurt. He is lying in pain in the bottom of a trench. With many dead bodies around him, he sees that playing dead won’t help because the Russians are stabbing every body they find with a bayonet. He knew he was running out of time. To his luck a tank broke down over him. He now has to think fast. He sees a dead Russian boy and puts on him uniform to disguise himself. He leaves the trench disguised as a Russian. As he is going he get shot by a surviving German in the side. He passes out and wakes up in hospital. When the soldiers he meets asks his name he says he has amnesia. He meets a young nurse in…
Paul Bäumer is a German, young boy, who, together with his classmates, enlists for the army to fight in the Great War. Full of enthusiasm and adventurous thoughts, they arrive at the front, but then are faced with the horrific and soul-destroying war. One by one the classmates are fall in action……
Hunt also showed how ordinary German civilians dealt with the eminent, totalitarian power of the Nazi regimen. Not everyone that was subdued and brainwashed into following this communist party believed or agreed with its teachings and ideals. Hunt allowed the reader to have a personal connection to the horrible and inhumane ways the Nazi party operated. In her candid and honest account of events, she does not apologize or try to conceal the facts and atrocities that the German government caused to Jews, civilians from countries they invaded and even to their own people.…
All Quiet on the Western Front Is a Novel told from the perspective of Nineteen year old Paul Bäumer, a German Soldier who joins the war effort on the French front during World War I. Bäumer and a few friends get the idea to join the military after listening to patriotic speeches from their previous teacher, however quickly forsake these ideologies after experiencing the horrors of warfare on the front.…
Hitler was inhumane, so were many people of that time. Some people had more faith in Hitler then God. Since they lived in horrible conditions and treated as bad as there living conditions many Jews wanted to die. They felt like there god wouldn’t protect them or save them from the reality they know live in so many Jews lost their faith in their God. In the book, Night by Elie Wiesel he shows how being treated inhumanely had caused him and many others like him to lose his faith in God during the Holocaust.…
War has a tendency to bring out both the worst and best qualities of human beings. These conflicts and their resulting effects on people are often depicted in literature. One of the best examples of war literature is Erich Marie Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front. All Quiet on the Western Front depicts the everyday struggles of German soldier Paul Baümer and his comrades. Throughout the war, the servicemen maintain a strong bond between with each other. However, this bond even extends to the enemy on occasion, showcasing the universality of humanity. Two key themes in All Quiet on the Western Front are comradeship and the universal nature of mankind, and Remarque often demonstrates this.…
Through the eyes of the WICKED founders, all must be returned to normal, no matter the costs or deaths that may follow. In The Fever Code written by American author James Dashner, the world is overrun by a horrible disease, the Flair, where only the immune can survive this zombie-like epidemic. The outsiide world is filled with smoke, with all life gone, both plants and people. In order to save the human race and all of humanity, WICKED gathers children-seperating them from families and putting them through emotional and physical tasks, all of which having no recollection of their pasts. finding the cure, and returning the world to its original state, with a new world of green…
In her book "How Jews Became White Folk", Karen Brodkin examines the question of how Jews came to be regarded as White. She does this by first explaining how Jews were racially categorized prior to this time, and how they were considered to be inferior to the white race. Whiteness is and has always relied on continually renegotiated interpretations; that has more to do with ones social class rather than skin color. The argument that Brodkin presents is that the claim of whiteness are extended to certain races or ethnic groups at certain times, and that the past experiences of these groups cannot wipe away such indisputable social facts.…
In Sebastian Haffner’s memoir Defying Hitler, he explains how he experienced the beginning of the rise of Nazi Germany and Hitler through World War I and shortly after the war. According to Haffner, the rise of Nazism in Germany can be accredited to the mindset of the youth, extreme nationalism throughout the war, and the crippling inflation of the German currency.…
Simple, engaging, and compelling; for many people, these words are an excellent way to describe Irmgard A. Hunt’s childhood and family history. In her nonfiction book, On Hitler’s Mountain: Overcoming the Legacy of a Nazi Childhood, the author gives us an accurate account of German society before, during, and after the reign of one of the most evil men who ever lived. Throughout the book, the author defines who the German people were, their beliefs, and actions through the eyes of her family. Some of the most striking elements, however, are the portrayals of the common folk as being more humane than the dictatorial regime that so defined them. With an unfettered hand, and an original approach to one of the world’s most…
My name is Alex Harvie. I thought my life was great, and it was. Living as an English professor in the lively cobblestone houses of Southampton was a dream for many people, but it would soon become the most far-fetched idea my mind could possibly conjure. By soon, I mean right now. My lifestyle became a fleeting luxury the moment I received a telegram that I would be drafted to the infantry to fight against Hitler and his indescribably unethical and cruel war organization. The Nazis, my mind raced as I thought, the bloody Nazis. Of course, if I hadn’t just been drafted, I wouldn’t have to worry about those belligerent fools, but I had been drafted. I had been born again as an Allied soldier by the words on a piece of paper.…
Picture a living in a world where your country had just lost a war. The people are starving, there are no jobs, and the world blames your country for starting the war. Now, imagine a powerful, persuasive, and well-spoken man rising to power. The people listen to the words of this man. They believe that he will fix all that is broken. They want to follow him. Next, imagine that he begins to blame people of your nationality for the loss of the war. He convinces the masses that the country must be cleansed of all Jews, homosexuals, priests, gypsies, people with disabilities, and more.…
Elie Wiesel, a former prisoner of Auschwitz, once said, “The opposite of love is not hate, it’s indifference.” Auschwitz was a camp set up by Nazis in the early 1940s and more than 12,000 people died a day there. Who did Auschwitz affect? What happened there? How did it start? Auschwitz was a camp for many more than just Jewish people.…
Leni Riefenstahl, was a famous film director of the time and a devoted propagandist supporting the Nazis. She was amazing in working the angles. Hitler was shown to the public first as one of them, an ordinary person, and then as a god. In this specific scene, the German population is introduced as a whole united community to put in contrast the failures of World War I and this was thanks to their obedience and loyalty to Hitler. The purpose of all the media creating a media cult on Hitler was to represent “Hitler as Germany and Germany as Hitler” (as Hess is quoted to say in the film), meaning a united population loyal to Hitler.…