There is no brightness in the Holocaust. It is nothing more than an arrangement of deep, saddening works ranging from memoirs to novels to any other form of expression. But there is always the same feeling attached to the words and pictures surrounding World War II. The burning question of ‘how’. How can the human race be so cruel?…
Blair Louis Mrs. Gruehn English 14 November 2017 Night Essay Imagine going through a devastating time in history when people have to witness the death of beloved family members and having to suffer, endure, and survive in disgusting concentration camps. However, victims of the Holocaust had to face this terror in reality.…
The Holocaust was a horrible genocide that killed Jews, Soviet prisoners of war, Slavs, political opponents, the mentally and physically disabled, and others that the Nazis considered a waste of human life (Keko 2). The images of all the piles of dead bodies and all of the saddened faces of those innocent people scar the lives of today’s society. Those pictures are memorable images that have broken the world’s heart. As well as pictures, Elie Wiesel, a survivor from the Holocaust, wrote a very informative book called Night. He tells about his experience in vivid details that makes today’s readers able to understand just how devastating this tragic genocide was.…
“One more stab to the heart, one more reason to hate. One less reason to live.(109)” Throughout Night by Elie Wiesel, Nazis show time and time again how relentless they will be with their physical and emotional abuse towards prisoners in concentration camps. Through understanding the ways Nazis dehumanize Jews and other minorities, we can see three very important steps to bringing them back into normal life: Non physically abusive treatment, giving them goals, friends, a reason to live, and a non-fluctuant lifestyle, and providing former prisoners with more diverse lifestyle choices. One of Nazi Germany’s most well known ways of dehumanizing people is by physically abusing them.…
It is astonishing how millions of innocent people died from such a horrible tragedy, the holocaust, being something that many around in the world cannot relate but will never forget. Those who have suffered in concentration camps have experience great pain that has affected them emotionally and physically causing changes on their values. Nothing can justify or compensate what these people have lost. Whether it was their religion, their individualism, or their wanting to live all things they are never going to get back.…
Genocides, such as the Holocaust of World War II, test their victims both mentally and physically. In surviving virtual Hell, the dehumanization process enacted upon the victims strips them of their personality, both inside and out. Through standard uniform and a robbery of one’s name, replaced with a number cruelly etched into one’s skin, the walls of a concentration camp physically make the many into one. The degradation that occurs mentally is yet even more tragic. Elie Wiesel, survivor and author of his memoir Night, recounts this experience.…
Imagine Auschwitz: people’s eyes are filled with sorrow as they glance at the girl. Her ribs are detected from under her shirt and her nails were born with yellow stains that, just looked like she peeled hundreds of lemons. As a man sits up and grabs his whip, he shares a laugh with another commander and starts to shuffle towards the starving child. His hand grabbed the girl’s arm. After cries of pain the child limps with blood slashes and purple and blue fingers.…
In the year of 1933, people were taken from their homes and sent to concentration camps where most worked there until they died. When a human being is stripped of his or her right and treated like they are less than nothing that is called dehumanization. In Europe, these people lost all of their dignity and pride. In addition, they thought that the Creator of the Universe had given up on them and had left them. These people thought that he was the reason that all these terrible events happened to them.…
(Slide 1: Intro) (Slide 2: intro clip of the movie) Just going about your daily business, working hard to provide for your family, living a simple life; just like anyone else when, (Slide 3,4,5: Holocaust images) with no warning, frightening Nazi soldiers smash your door down, separate you from your family and brutally kill them along with your friends and neighbours right in front of your eyes. It’s a horrifying calamity that one could only imagine. (Slide 6: show the rest of invasion- stop when camera pans to woods) (Slide 7: Years) Approximately 70 years later, we are left to consider a version of the truth surrounding exactly what occurred in that instant for the victims. Can we believe this truth?…
This shows how the nature of the Holocaust, changed the nature of its…
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.…
The Holocaust is one of the most gruesome events of the twentieth century. Concentration camps killed millions of Jews, under the direction of Adolph Hitler. Art Spiegelman’s poignant novel- Maus: A Survivor’s Tale- reflects the story of his parents, told by his father, surviving the Holocaust. Spiegelman tells his fathers story not only through his fathers diction, but also with heartrending pictures.…
Holocaust Paper The Holocaust museum located in Washington D.C. has an interesting history from the efforts that went into the creation and design of this museum. Part of what makes this museum so interesting is the architecture, artifacts and the way that the museum tries to evoke the audience’s emotions. A thing to remember when discussing the Holocaust exhibits is that the museum wanted the audience to understand that, “the museum in Washington D.C., is not a center of Holocaust remembrance, but an extension of the fabric of the center: the original sites. ” These subjects can give a sense of meaning to the audience and how they could perceive the Holocaust in their own way.…
Reflection: Mentally and Physically Disabled of the Holocaust Following my research on the elimination of the mentally and physically disabled of the Holocaust, I was left with a mix of shock and sorrow. It’s obvious through society’s actions, even today, that disabled people are treated as outsiders, they always have been. While that came to me as no shock, the names they were called and propaganda Hitler implemented to exterminate them left me feeling as if I’ve been oblivious. The main tactic Hitler used was propaganda, brainwashing Germans to believe that those who were disabled have suffered enough and it would be wrong to allow them to live on in their suffering.…
Considering how the Nazis were able to heartlessly watch men and women, adults and children suffer in the camps, it’s no wonder that they had to be something inhuman, something beyond mercilessness. And this barbarity begins to make an impact on the Jews in the camp as…