Gerda Weissmann Klein: Book Analysis

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Gerda Weissmann Klein is a Holocaust survivor that was born in Bielsko, Holand. She went through the misery of knowing what pain and suffering is. When she was 15, the Germans took over Bielsko and that is when everything started happening. On April nineteenth of 1942, the Jews were asked to move to the ghetto. Then they were forced to work in work camps and Gerda and her parents got separated. Later she went to a concentration camp, a 5 month death march. Stating of what this teenager (now woman) went through, Gerda was very qualified to write this book, knowing what actually happened inside the camps.
Gerda’s life story that she writes in the book is during the World War two. The book cover’s her life from the invasion from Poland, 1939 …show more content…

She tries to emphasize on the social factors but the political factors as well. The political factors of this book would the the war and how it had an affect on the Jews. The social would be how they were discriminated and how they were treated just because Hitler just wanted Aryans. The author, at the end of the book isn’t really that biased from the things that happened. I would suspect that some of the doctors that treated her were German, and I imagine she had nothing against them. I would imagine she would be prejudiced because of all the horrible things she went through. She does sympathize with the Jews more because of the fact that she was in the concentration camp, saw and experienced the death march and the death of loved ones. Obviously in this situation, she would be somewhat biased. I think Gerda was motivated to write this book because she wanted to tell her story and the things she experienced for it to not happen again. The sources used in this book was only primary sources, Gerda’s personal experience. This book does not contain any footnotes or bibliography material at the end of the …show more content…

What Gerda wrote was real not a writer using people’s stories to make one. But when people make their own stories about the Holocaust, they could use Gerda’s as an example because she wrote the book so well and detailed that I thought that I was there with her. I think Gerda did an amazing job writing this book and putting so much work and detail into it. I’ve concluded that I even have a different perspective on the Holocaust. The Holocaust was a horrible thing, and although I have read several books, this one was real and not sugar coated. I know now what the Jews and many others went through and how much they suffered. I think that what surprised me the most was that the SS locked the Jews in the factory with the bomb. They had to be heartless to do that to anybody. Everything they did in general from the horrible food (bread and coffee) they gave them to the jobs they have them (flax detail). Although it was a struggle for Gerda to get out of the camps, at least she found her happy ending with her

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