Using the phrase, “went like sheep to the slaughter” meant that “death to these giants of faith was something …show more content…
They were separated from their families. Most of the time it was men with men, and women with women. They had barely anything, including hair. Jews and sheep in comparably had their hair cut off and it would be used for something like yarn or seat cushions.
Sheep hair would be used for clothing, fleece for example. They were also forced to wear the Star of David to be labeled as a Jew, just like sheep had to wear an identification tag on their ears.
Even though the Jews had no say on what they would be doing, they would fight back. Every day they fought for their lives, and there was a lot of resistance. The turnout of that atrocious action leads them to the ground, (literally). At the end of Schindler’s List, the Nazis did not have any benevolence for the helpless Jews. The substantial resistance had been very difficult because usually if they do not comprehend what they are being told
Schindler’s List presented innocent Jews being lined up and crammed into trains to go to a death camp to be killed. There are several comparisons with Jewish people to sheep, and slaughters to concentration camps. However, they are two completely different subjects that correlate greatly. If they resist to do an order, they would have been slain. Altogether, this movie does confirm that the Jews went like sheep to the