People might disagree with these tactics, however, because positive attitudes can lead to becoming naive and believing certain things, making you unprepared for the future. Many people got through these problems and conflicts with a number of tactics. People thought positively to believe things will get better, fought against the root of the problems to try and stop the problem from continuing, and tried to forget what happened after the Holocaust ended. These tactics are some of the finest ways to respond to conflict, as it will help those get through conflict easier, will not affect their lives as much in the end, and will hopefully end the conflict sooner.
During and after the Holocaust, many Jews kept a positive attitude, helping them get through a lot of vigorous times. A lot of people during the Holocaust did a lot of contrasting things to keep up their positive attitude and trudge forward. Elizabeth Monnig of the Arizona Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies says, “To overcome the detrimental effects of the chaos within their lives, children turned to playing with games and toys to recapture a sense of familiarity and comfort that they had had before the Holocaust.” During the Holocaust, Jews had a …show more content…
An author from My Jewish Learning states, “Just one year after the end of Nazi rule, Germany and the territories of its former allies became the major destinations of Jewish refugees who fled violent anti-Semitism in Poland and other countries of Eastern Europe” (My Jewish Learning). After many people were liberated from their camps and hideaways, they tried to forget about the past and focus on the present and the future of their lives. Consequently, they tried to get as far away from where they were hiding or living and tried to begin a new life. After the Holocaust, many went to go live in Displaced Persons camps, once they got there, they tried to begin a new life, they even started to form their own government system. My Jewish Learning says, “In many DP camps the liberated Jews elected representatives almost immediately after liberation” (My Jewish Learning). When the Jews were liberated, many had nowhere to go, so they went to Displaced Persons camps where they were able to somewhat rebuild their lives and start to keep up with current events. After the Holocaust, many people, including the Jews were liberated, they were lost and could not get a job, and they had nowhere to go, My Jewish Learning states, “In that period Jews constituted only a small minority of DPs. Approximately 50,000 Jews, mostly from Eastern Europe, who