Compare And Contrast The Holocaust And Atomic Bombing

Improved Essays
The Holocaust and the atomic bombings were both tragic events in our nation’s history, however I believe that both were equally devastating because many lives were both tortured and lost. Even though lives were both lost and tortured in these tragic events, each event experienced different ways in which it tortured and killed people inhumanely. During the Holocaust the Nazi’s would torture and kill Jews in what were called concentration camps. Auschwitz, one of the biggest concentration camp, which was actually a combination of three different types of camps located in Poland. There was an extermination camp at Birkenau, a slave-labor camp called Buna, and a prisoner camp for political prisoners. At the extermination camps the Nazi would torture and kill the Jews by …show more content…
The damage from these bombings lasted for many years and damaged miles of property. People who were within a mile of the blast were killed instantly. A few days following the explosion numerous people suffered from burns and radiation exposure. These bombs exterminated numerous people, but they also caused massive destruction to homes, land and the environment.
The Nazi’s extermination and torture of Jews and other’s lasted for a period of twelve years. “The principal images you see today of the Holocaust are of barbed wire, disease-ridden barracks, malnourished prisoners, gas chambers and crematoria’s.” (Levi, 535) This is different from the atomic bombings because the effects of the bombs were still being seen seventy years later. The value of the survivor testimonies from these tragic events in history is to remember the effects that Warfare has on civilian population, it is important to record each survivors experience as to add to the big picture of the brutality of men of power before the survivors are forgotten, and remember what can happen if tyranny and technology are not kept in check by the morals of the

Related Documents

  • Great Essays

    The Diary of Dawid Sierakowiak: Five Notebooks from the Lodz Ghetto, Chil Rajchman’s The Last Jew of Treblinka, and Olga Lengyel’s Five Chimneys: A Woman Survivor’s True Story of Auschwitz are the accounts of three Jewish people who experienced the German’s answer to the Jewish problem from their particular time and place of the “Final Solution”. Sierakowiak’s diary was written while he was living in the Lodz Labor Ghetto with his family and died before he was deported. Rajchman’s and Lengyel’s books are a survivor’s account of their experience at the Treblinka death camp and Auschwitz-Birkenau labor/death camp, respectively. This paper is to compare the experiences between these three people as they suffered much of the same deprivations, yet their experiences ended in different outcomes.…

    • 1551 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This memoir takes place during the Holocaust, an era in time in which European Jews were killed and forced to work in labour camps. Families were separated; people were starved, beaten to death, and many far worse forms of punishment. In this memoir, numerous laws in the Universal…

    • 529 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Night Research Paper

    • 1191 Words
    • 5 Pages

    We have been learning about the Holocaust and World War 2 for many years as part of our social studies curriculum. Most of us probably, and I hope, know that this was a bad thing for Hitler to do and be a part of. You always feel more empathy and sadness when you actually read documentaries about people that have experienced this terrible time. The story Night by Elie Wiesel shares her personal experiences of being kicked out of her hometown and being transported to the camps, what happened at the camps and the impact it had on her, and how there was so much death going on and barely anybody survived. Hungary a place where Jews are happily living their lives until the German armies take it all over.…

    • 1191 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In the memoir, “Night”, Elie Wiesel is faced with the struggles of going into concentration camps such as Auschwitz, Buna, and others in late World War II. During the holocaust, because of the lack of modern technology, no other countries knew about what was happening to the Jewish prisoners in these camps. However, Elie Wiesel was not the only one who was struck with devastation in these times of unknown crisis. Other Holocaust victims lost faith in not just their surroundings, but in themselves as well. Due to the abominable conditions of the concentration camps, Jews were both physically and psychologically damaged.…

    • 1106 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Have you ever wanted to know what it was like during the holocaust? More than likely not, because it was a horrible time when a powerful man named Adolf Hitler, a Jew killer, had ordered that all Jews to be killed or be sent to concentration camps. The camps were a place where Jews were sent to either to work until they die or be sentenced to death. Trude was born Gertrude Feldmann, the youngest of three children in a happy middle-class family in Bratislava. Trude's birth in 1929 coincided with the Wall Street Crash, which led to the collapse of her father's bank and dented the family income.…

    • 455 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Perhaps the most dreadful event in recent history is the tragedy that befell the world during the Holocaust. Throughout a twelve year period, the Nazis were able to wreak havoc and torture innocent people purely because of their “inferiority”. The Nazi ideology was rooted in the idea that the German race was superior to all, and this state of mind was behind all of the atrocities that took place in Germany and surrounding areas. While the majority of the worst travesties took place during the final years of the holocaust, there was a significant build-up to those events, which took place throughout the years from 1933 to 1938. During these years, the Nazis began to show their true intention to the world, and began their systematic persecution…

    • 1436 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    Throughout history, there have been many wars and much oppression of certain groups worldwide. One of the world’s most famous and cruelest oppressions was the Holocaust. Near the end of World War II, America dropped the first two atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki which brought the end of the war. Some historians may argue that the Holocaust was more about liberating the people in concentration camps and giving those people freedom from Hitler and his dictatorship. Other may argue that not much is known about other groups beside the Jews that were affected by the Holocaust.…

    • 2310 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    On the 30 of January in 1933, the shocking Holocaust starts. The unimaginable vindictiveness was unleashed on the Jews by Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party. German troopers rash the pure homes of Jews, compelling them to bow underneath. The Jews carrying on with an ordinary typical life were now presently a target for an inhuman evil man, Adolf Hitler. We read and learn about the terrifying demonstrations in the concentration camps by unique and individual stories from the surviving Jews.…

    • 1094 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    These people were disintegrated the instant the bomb was dropped and many more around the area were affected by the…

    • 515 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    It was an average, hot day in Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. Home to the Japanese army’s Second General Headquarters, yet also home to 280,000 civilians, 43,000 military personnel, and 20,000 Korean forced laborers (Gray, Paul, and Kunii). Everything had been running accordingly, adults going to their jobs, school children assisting in the cleaning of the streets, until they saw a foreign object, hurling at them at a fast speed. It exploded before anyone had the chance to choke out the work ‘bomb’, leaving the menace behind the death trap, President Truman,a villain to Japan. The Japanese had attacked multiple places before the bombing occurred, including cities such as Shanghai, Manchuria, and most famously, Pearl Harbor.…

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    So many people lost their family members because of this, and a lot of the children were already at school when the bombs were dropped.…

    • 491 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Events that Prove the Validity of the Holocaust Throughout the 1940s, Nazi Germany was capturing the Jewish population from all over Eastern Europe. Concentration camps were a major cause of death during the Holocaust. This topic is important for the general public to be educated about because it will help promote worldwide education. Without the world knowing the consequences of dehumanization and genocide, history will only repeat itself.…

    • 1172 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Bruchett explains how at the time when the bomb fell, there were a few people who did not suffer from any injuries, but now are dying from the after effects of the bombing (2). People began to have the aftermath symptoms of the bombing as they lost their sense of hunger, started to lose their hair, had the appearance of bluish spots on their bodies and as they began bleeding from different places such as their ears, nose and mouth (Bruchett 2-3). Bruchett also goes on to talk about how drastic the effects of the bombs were, “Many people had suffered only a slight cut from a falling splinter of brick or steel. They should have recovered quickly. But they did not.…

    • 1803 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    Many people around the world are well aware of the cruel treatment, mass murdering, and inhumane acts forced upon Jews during World War 2, known as the Holocaust. The word Holocaust, actually meaning “sacrifice by fire” in Greek, represents the systemic and hateful planned actions performed onto Jews. “in 1933, the Jewish population of Europe stood at over 9 million,” says author of “Introduction to the Holocaust” on www.ushmm.org, German Nazi leader, Adolf Hitler, would soon play a role in drastically changing that population. As World War 2 began, Adolf Hitler’s main goal was to make Germany a world power.…

    • 1542 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Nazi Concentration Camps

    • 1209 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The Concentration Camps run by Nazi’s during World War II were horrific and unimaginable. The people of this world will forever know the conditions, treatments, mass murder, experimentation, and many other factors helping make the concentration camps leave a mark on history that will be forever known by the people of this world. While there are many things that could be covered on this topic, there are three that need to be stressed and understood. These topics are the different types of camps, treatment at those camps, and finally describing what happened in the most horrific camp, Auschwitz. What follows will help you understand how these camps functioned, and what happened inside those barbed wire fences.…

    • 1209 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays