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The Holocaust In The Book Thief By Hans Hubermann

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The Holocaust In The Book Thief By Hans Hubermann
by indigenous Hutu extremists. While most of the world took no action to stop the bloodshed, Paul Rusesabagina, a hotel manager, curtained more than a thousand Tutsis inside his hotel. Similarly in The Book Thief, one such man, Hans Hubermann, put his own and his family's life at risk to save a Jew. Hans Hubermann took a Jew, named Max Vandenburg, into his home to save him from imprisonment even when it went against everything he was taught about. At that time, the Jews, according to Hitler, were regarded menial; moreover, they were constrained to work and immured at concentration camps, where at one point they were murdered. By April 30, 1945, most of Europe’s Jews had been executed. Four million had been gassed in the labor camps while another two million had been shot dead. At the same time, somewhere in Krakow, Poland, an entrepreneur named Oskar Schindler hired 1700 workers for his factory, 1200 whom were Jews. By the end of World War 2, Oskar and his wife became penniless after having used his fortune to bribe authorities and save his workers.

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