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    No one movie, article, or document really changes anything. The reaction of the people, this is what actually makes change. With the reaction of people to a good film, document or article, more good outlets of media will be released. This then turns into a cycle, with more good media, more people are affected for good and will then put out even more inspiring media. This “good media” helps to inspire others to do good around the world. Schindler’s list is an example of media that inspires…

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    experienced in the biblical era or a defensive war, which is to be undertaken if the nation is under threat. The second permissible war as stated by the prophetic vision is discretionary war, which refers to a fight to enlarge the borders of the nation of Israel in order to ensure its survival, however this war is only permitted following an intense session of debate. Despite permitting obligatory and discretionary war, Deuteronomy demonstrates an adamancy that all avenues of peace must be first…

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    Neither do, Israel women contest it because if they did they could be looked on as a betraying their modesty. Why is it such a sensitive issue? Most Israeli women prefer to be considered modest than a careerist. Rather than promoting equality in the Israeli society…

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    1l million people die in the holocaust, and 6 million are jews. People are stuffed into gas chambers where they are suffocated by the toxic gas consuming them. People are shot by Nazis for not running fast enough, or starved to death because they get little food. Elie Wiesel witnesses these atrocities and is forever changed from the innocent boy he once was. The traumatic experiences Elie undergoes leads him to transform physically,emotionally,and spiritually. The holocaust alters Elie’s…

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    Theme Of The Poem Home

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    Warsan Shire’s poem “Home” describes the atrocities of abandoning a person’s homeland, for reasons like takeover and danger, to the point that the emotions inspired by a homeland become unrecognizable, this cause many to become refugees seeking safety. This can correlate to many real-world events in which people lose their homelands and none is better known than that of the Jewish Holocaust during World War II. In particular, this is true for the case of the Bulgarian Jews during World War II…

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    Discussion Questions 1. In Kluger’s view, should we preserve and visit places such as Auschwitz? What arguments speak for and against it? What is your opinion? In Kluger’s view, we should not necessarily preserve and visit places such as Auschwitz. The author explains her views while talking to graduate students. The students claimed that, “Preservation was a form of restitution” (p. 64). Although they agreed that no one liked the touristy action of people gawking at Auschwitz, they stated…

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    Chapter 1 Summary: Their in a small town and people were taken by soldiers Key quotation: “It belonged to everyone since it no longer belonged to anyone” Questions/Reflections: What is a Yellow Star? Why were Jews told to wear them? Why did the storyteller and his family get to stay and everyone else was taken? Chapter 2 Summary: The story teller and his family were taken into a train with the rest of the people and were brought to the first camp that they stay at. Key quotation:…

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    Different Perspectives Towards the Holocaust The Holocaust has revolutionized the globe throughout time, witnessing the gruesome event where more than a thousand victims specifically targeting Jews, have been massacred and tortured by the German union known as Nazis ruled over by Hitler, forming an ideal for the Nazi’s organization to eradicate the Jewish population. During the Holocaust Jewish children, men, women, old and young were sent to camps, where there they were worked to death and if…

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    belief of Yahweh, Israel’s history is key. Yahweh, the only god of the Israelites changed the culture and social structure of the people, and the Hebrew Bible tells through the eyes of male scribes about the time and traditions. As a center for trade, Israel was well connected to other societies and empires which spread the influence and spread exposure to…

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    Hasidism Summary

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    Benjamin Brown of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, outlines the rise of religious radicalism with in Galicia during the first years of the nineteenth century. In his article The Two Faces of Religious Radicalism, Orthodoxy and Holy Sinning in 19th Century Hasidism in Hungry and Galicia, Brown asserts that the strengthening of Hasidism and the Orthodoxy movements stemmed from the need to protect Jewish tradition in the face of acculturation. He states that Hasidism was a conservative…

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