Gerda Weissman Klein never lost hope that her life would get better, even though she went through such a horrible experience. She still has faith in humanity, and even in the terrible conditions of the camps and dealing with the loss of her family, Gerda and her friends manage to still support each other and see the light in everything. “My experience has taught me that all of us have a reservoir of untapped strength that comes to the fore at moments of crisis.” Her story was inspiring and beautifully written and had a great message of the importance of life and…
The first effect is about the many different ways the Jews were killed in the death camps. Some, mostly twins, died from being experimented on by Dr. Mengele. He was also known as the “Angel of Death” from all the patients he killed while experimenting on. The camps spread disease, which would also kill prisoners. Some lacked food and starved to death.…
One might say that since this book was about the holocaust, nothing about it is compassionate. Without compassion many characters in the story might not have survived. Yes the Nazis showed little compassion towards anyone, for the most of the story the Jews have compassion between one another. At the end of the story however little compassion is shown between the Jews. Men were fighting like animals over bread and they did not care for dead or dying Jews.…
“Society was composed of three simple categories: the killers, the victims, and the bystanders,” Elie Wiesel stated in his “The Perils of Indifference” speech given on April 12, 1999, at the White House. In his speech, Wiesel discusses the indifference that the Jewish people experienced during the Holocaust. Weisel was taken by the Nazis in 1944 at the age of 15 and spent about a year in various concentration camps, including Birkenau, Auschwitz, Buna, Gleiwitz, and Buchenwald. Throughout his time in concentration camps, Elie witnessed the cruelty between strangers, and even sometimes between friends and family. Elie explains to the audience the dangers of being indifferent in “The Perils of Indifference”.…
He saw the woman from the train slowly go mad from the loss of her family, he knew what people were going through when they got selected, he “That night the soup tasted of corpses.” (Wiesel 65) “All that was left was a shape that resembled me. “(Wiesel 37) An evil sickness spreads a terror in its wake, The victims of its shadow weep and writhe. (Picková 1)This is like the Nazis, spreading out and in their wake leaving terror in the hearts of Jews. And those already caught are in suffering and…
The Jews were the main focus of the Nazis but their primary target was the Jewish children. This occurred because they were the next generation of Jews and they would eventually have Jewish children of their own. Therefore the Nazis persecuted and systematically killed millions of Jews during the Holocaust and affected human beings worldwide tp shift their way of thinking and seeing things since they couldn’t believe someone can do such cruelty to millions of people. This change humans have when they learn about the torture the Nazis have inflicted on others, like Elie; the protagonist of Wiesel’s memoir; may lead people to transform in a bad way. The Holocaust memoir by Elie Wiesel indeed shows the extreme circumstances negatively change…
The Nazis’ slowly worsening oppression of the Jews, demonstrates the importance of recognizing oppressors in a society quickly and not allowing them to gain traction. For instance, “The yellow star? Oh well, what of it? You don't die of it.” (9) when the Nazis’s begin to seperate the people by symbols, it results in the Jews optimism.…
Dear Mr, Elie Wiesel. My English recently finished your book "Night", one of the few survivor stories of the Holocaust. The Holocaust is the epitome of genocide, which always begins with an idea and like a wildfire, it grows. I've had a chance to observe this mentality amongst others. Discrimination among differences still exists.…
The troublesome events of the Holocaust instilled a…
“Nazis”, another word for terror which refreshes all the wounds in the history of humanity. Everyone in the world connect Nazis to holocaust which is absolutely true, but they aren’t aware of all the steps they took in order to reach to that position where they can get enough trust of people who will not fight back against them. Well, we all know that it didn’t work out well for them and ended up losing their lives as well. Nazis was a group made of Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler and some others who wanted all Non-Germans out of Germany. They wanted people who only had blue eyes and blond hair which according to them was a perfect example of true Germans.…
Nazism is an ideology of white supremacists that condoned authoritarian rule and behavior. It has negative connotation due to its history of evil and ignorance that led to the genocide of millions of Jewish people. In Alfons Heck’s book, A Child of Hitler, he discusses the rise of Hitler and reminisces upon his experience under Hitler’s rule. He was a part of the Hitler Youth and eventually became a general of the Nazi party. During Hitler’s rule, Heck’s indoctrination and the social expectations demanded of him crafted him into becoming a servant of Hitler.…
Lasting effect of Hitler and Nazi’s on Germany Hitler and his Nazi soldiers terrified the citizens that of Berlin, Germany, and the towns around it. They wanted to rid the world of the Jewish people. It was a scary time to be a Jew, or to be alive in Germany. I have done plenty of research in the library, on Amazon Books and YouTube; and using internet sources to learn plenty of information about this subject.…
The Jews’ desire to live deteriorates through their loss of identity, inhumane treatment, and their loss of dignity. As strong as the Jews are, no one can tolerate the utterly painful dehumanization that was bestowed upon them by the Nazis. Individual identity is paramount to a person’s…
Many prisoners took revenge on the captured SS soldiers and still others retreated to their religion. Above all, the inmates had been stripped of their humanity as well as their personal identities, and what remained was merely a shell of a human being These Jewish people and these Polish people were like animals. They were so degraded, there was no goodness, no kindness, nothing of that nature, there was no sharing. If they got a piece of something to eat, they grabbed it and ran away in a corner and fought off anyone who came near them” (Holocaust-trc,…
Such was the case for the Germans following World War I. In “Defining Enemies, Making Victims,” Omer Bartov argues that in Nazi Germany and the subsequent Holocaust, the world has found the ultimate enemy in Nazis and the ultimate victim in Jews. Germany was broken after World War I on almost every level—financially, physically and psychologically. And, while German Jews had built a strong sense of solidarity while fighting…