In the Holocaust millions of Jews lost their lives because of simply who they were. Many however hid and survived this dark event in history. It was the year 1933 and WW11 roared on, some saw it as a war against countries but eventually everything dark and ugly came to the light. Adolf Hitler was the chancellor of Germany and had obtained great popularity with the German people. While beginning to attack nations he was also trying to destroy all Jews in a horrific mass genocide. Creating concentration camps and taking all that the Jews owned he began to round up these human beings as if they were cattle. The stories account for them as being kidnapped at midnight to being tricked into going to their death thinking they were going for a better life. Not all stories ended in despair, there were many who managed to outsmart the Nazis and their allies. Many hid from them, blended in or fled to safe countries. Even under all the pain and horror many prevailed and won the prize of life. People, no matter who will fight to live no matter what the circumstance. These are the stories of those fortunate survivors who hid, fled, lived to tell their perilous account of the holocaust. It was the year 1942 and the war was in full swing, not much older than I a boy and his brother, Rolf and Alfred watched as Nazis rounded up friends, classmates, family and each other. They watched their mother and father as the Nazis violently took them, tied them up, and threw them into the trunk of a car. This would be the last time the brothers would ever see their beloved parents. Rolf was a young high school student when he was taken by the Gestapo, Hitler’s henchmen. Somehow his brother Alfred managed to escape and only Rolf was taken. He awoke in a bas... ... middle of paper ... ...hiding place. Some had to do very terrible and heartbreaking things in order to survive. Every day was a struggle for those who fought but many prevailed and did not give up. They looked evil straight in the eye and said I will not give up, I will survive. Works Cited 1st Part Hall, Allan Incredible Stories of young Jews who hid in the heart of Nazi Berlin The Daily Record 23 March 2013 www.dailyrecord.co.uk Rolf 2nd Part Hall, Allan Incredible Stories of young Jews who hid in the heart of Nazi Berlin The Daily Record 23 March 2013 www.dailyrecord.co.uk Rahel Menzer, John Jeannine Burk/Survivor Stories1999-2014 www.holocaustsurvivors.org Thanks to Scandinavia Personal Stories www.thankstoscandinavia.org/the-rescue/personal-stories/ Nutis, Laura The Holocaust and Survivor stories May 2007 Mathew Hoffman Webmaster www.llperetz.org/graduates/laura-nutis.htm
January of 1933 the Nazis came to rule of Germany. Nazis believed that Germans were racially superior and seen Jews as a threat to their German racial community. Due to this reason, the Nazis created the Holocaust. The Holocaust is known as a time in history when Adolf Hitler, the leader of the Nazis and his collaborators killed to about six million Jews, through Genocide, Ethnic cleansing, deportation, and mass murder. But the point of this story is to tell the story of a young woman who I had the privilege to meet by the name of Anna Seelfreud Grosz who survived this tragic time in history.
The Holocaust will forever be known as one of the largest genocides ever recorded in history. 11 million perished, and 6 million of the departed were Jewish. The concentration camps where the prisoners were held were considered to be the closest one could get to a living hell. There is no surprise that the men, women, and children there were afraid. One was considered blessed to have a family member alongside oneself. Elie Wiesel was considered to be one of those men, for he had his father working side by side with him. In the memoir Night, by Elie Wiesel, a young boy and his father were condemned to a concentration camp located in Poland. In the concentration camps, having family members along can be a great blessing, but also a burden. Elie Wiesel shows that the relationship with his father was the strength that kept the young boy alive, but was also the major weakness.
Between Night and The Hiding Place, comradeship, faith, strength, and people of visions are clearly proved to be essential in order to survive in these death camps. Corrie, Elie, and other victims of these harsh brutalities who did survive had a rare quality that six million others unfortunately did not.
A Lucky Child by Thomas Buergenthal is a memoir about his time as a Jewish child in multiple ghettos and death camps in and around Germany during World War II. The author shares about his reunions with family and acquaintances from the war in the years between then and now. Buergenthal wished to share his Holocaust story for a number of reasons: to prevent himself from just being another number, to contribute to history, to show the power and necessity of forgiveness, the will to not give up, and to question how people change in war allowing them to do unspeakable things. The memoir is not a cry for private attention, but a call to break the cycle of hatred and violence to end mass crimes.
Regine Donner, a famous Holocaust survivor, once said, “I had to keep my Jewishness hidden, secret, and never to be revealed on penalty of death. I missed out on my childhood and the best of my adolescent years. I was robbed of my name, my religion, and my Zionist idealism” (“Hidden Children”). Jewish children went through a lot throughout the Holocaust- physically, mentally, and emotionally. Life was frightening and difficult for children who were in hiding during the rule of Adolf Hitler.
Kelly - Goss, Robert. "Hiding from the Nazis, a Jewish family survives the Holocaust." The Daily Advance. The Daily Advance, 09 Jul 2011. Web. 18 Nov 2013. .
Lidegaard, Bo. Countrymen: The Story of How Denmark’s Jews Escaped the Nazis, of the Courage of Their Fellow Danes- And of the Extraordinary Role of the SS. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2013.”
Who survived the holocaust? What are their lives like today? What has been the government's response towards those who survived after World War II? Have the survivors kept their faith? How has the survivors next generation been affected? The survivors of the holocaust were deeply effected by the trauma they encountered. This unforgettable experience influenced their lives, those around them, and even their descendants.
As WW!! raged on, Jews fled, hid and were massacred. The Jews, both strangers and friends that arrived in June, 1943 were no different. Seeking help after escaping a Polish Ghetto, the Bileckis built a bunker shrouded from enemy eyes with foliage. Sadly, their neighbours unveiled the reality of the secret bunker, which forced them to plot a new bunker site. The frightful winter brought terror to a new extent. The snow covered ground made prints more noticeable than ink on paper. Julian, one of the Bilecki children, was nimble, youthful and courageous, a survivor noted. The refugees were kept away from the brink of starvation thanks to that amiable boy who used his agility to jump swiftly from tree to tree like the raw ghosts of the Jews flitting away at the crack of dawn, following the path to nirvana. Satisfying the Jews’ hunger was a challenge in itself for the Bilecki family had to ration the shortage of food they had for t...
The article, “Teens Against Hitler”, by Lauren Tarshis, describes the challenges of Ben Kamm a Jewish boy, his family, and a vast amount of Jews, being vandalized by Hitler and his Nazi group during the 1930’s. Ben Kamm was in a dreadful area, were the Nazis were told from their master Hitler to execute all the Jews. Ben and his family were fine till 1939 the German troops invaded Poland. The police persecuted Warsaw's Jews. Ben and many others crammed into a small ghetto. His family moved into a small room. Nobody was allowed to leave. Although Ben and his family went through harsh challenges, he showed an incredible amount of courage in trying to end the war between the Jews and the Nazis.
"Ghettos under the Nazis - My Jewish Learning." Ghettos under the Nazis - My Jewish Learning. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 May 2014.
Imagine yourself in a WWⅡconcentration camp, performing forced labor in hideous living conditions whilst being nearly starved to death. What would be your attitude towards those around you, and most especially, your captors? For Corrie ten Boom and her sister Betsie, it was that of complete love and concern, and a desire to give them the light of Christ. A true story, The Hiding Place is Corrie ten Boom’s historical account of her and her family’s experience in WWⅡ. Written by Corrie herself, this 216 page book is crammed with tragedy as well as joy. Youngest of four children, Corrie ten Boom uses her home in Haarlem, Holland as a temporary safe house for Jews in hiding, until she is discovered and sent to prison as well as various concentration
As the Jews first went into the ghetto, it was scandalous to see a little lass shouting ‘goodbye Jews’ her right to be heard could still be heard in the after that view. This showed how much she had been unfair by Hitler’s cant.
This memoir, which sits on the library shelf, dusty and unread, gives readers a view of the reality of this brutal war. So many times World War II books give detail about the war or what went on inside the Concentration Camps, yet this book gives insight to a different side. A side where a child not only had to hide from Nazi’s in threat of being taken as a Jew, but a child who hid from the Nazi’s in plain sight, threatened every day by his identity. Yeahuda captures the image of what life was like from the inside looking out. “Many times throughout the war we felt alone and trapped. We felt abandoned by all outside help. Like we were fighting a war on our own” (Nir 186). Different from many non-fiction books, Nir uses detail to give his story a bit of mystery and adventure. Readers are faced with his true battles and are left on the edge of their
I will never forget my visit to Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp in the suburbs of Berlin, Germany. No teacher could have prepared me for this experience. I felt incredibly nervous. I stepped off the subway into the pouring rain, and was soon greeted by the concrete walls and barbed wire. I felt the big, gray walls closing in on me, and even though I was free, somehow, I felt the prisoners’ desperation who perished behind these walls.