500 jews and non- jews into hiding. In Belgium a resistance was able to derail a deportation train and attacked and burned files that the nazis forced on Jews. The main reason for these resistances was not to stop the Nazi regime, but for the Jews to be able to die on their own terms.
In the second spruce called “10 Incredible Cases Of Jewish Resistance During The Holocaust” shows …show more content…
I was apart of a Jewish resistance in a Poland ghetto, the ghetto I was placed in was the Sobibor Ghetto. When the War started I was only about ten years of age. I was still too young to know what was really going on, but i slowly started to realize this was serious. Me and my family were just normal people living day to day when suddenly I could not go to school with my friends, or eat with my family at my favorite restaurants. Little did I know I was being rushed into a ghetto. As time went on I grew older and more aware of what was going on around me. Every day I did not know wether I was going to die or live so i took everything day by day. By the time I turned fourteen I did not consider myself as a child anymore. With living in the ghetto I really did not have any time to be a child. I remember that one day they were loading the trains and picking all the people out of the ghetto that the Nazis felt were no use to them anymore. My mother and father were forced onto those trains that day and I never saw them again. That was when I realized if I am going to die I am going to die on my own terms. That was when I decided to join a Jewish resistance. No we did not do much to stop the Nazi’s, and no we did not intend to, but we wanted to be able to go against what was happening around us. We were able to sneak food from the outside time to time to keep the mot of us left in the ghetto alive. At one point a few of the higher