Was it bad that Bruno was naive?
The holocaust started in 1945 when the mass murder of 6 million European Jews. This started the second world war against the Nazi regime. During the holocaust Jewish people were transported and or taken to” ghettos”. During this time the Nazis tried to keep the whole thing quiet and not tell many people. But with killing so many people it was impossible for people to not figure out. During this Jewish families were gassed to death and non Jewish people either starved to death or got diseases. On average 12,000 jews were killed daily and more suffered (History.org). Bruno was naive to what was going on during this time. His father was a soldier and his family tried to hide it to him but it did end up taking his life in the end at the gas chamber in the concentration camp.
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In The Boy in the Striped Pajamas it was bad the Bruno was naive while during the holocaust because it allowed him to go into the Auschwitz camp.
This also allowed him to interact with the Jews which put his life at risk while he was with Shmuel. One of the reasons that this was bad because this allowed Shmuel to invite Bruno in. This was bad because this allowed him in into the concentration camp (Auschwitz) which in the end did end up taking his life. Another reason was Shmuel talked him into looking for his papa and making him promise he would help. Bruno didn't want to take back his promise so he stayed in the camp to help look for his papa. Bruno wanted to leave but he felt it was wrong to break a promise that he made to his best friend Shmuel. But eventually was marched away because he stayed too long helping Shmuel look for his papa. “I could crawl under,”said Bruno (Boyne 132). This quote was used because it showed how easy it was for them to get in the concentration camp and how it was bad that he was naive about the
holocaust. Another reason why it was bad that he was naive in The Boy In The Striped Pajamas was that he was very disrespectful to Shmuel. The reason why he was disrespectful was because he told Shmuel that germany was superior and was the best. Also during the book Bruno was naive that his dad was a soldier which during this time his dad was very bad towards the Jewish religion. Didn't know that Shmuel was living in such bad conditions and told him multiple times that he was lucky to be living there. “‘Well, because Germany is the greatest of all countries,’”Bruno replied(Boyne 112). All these reasons show that Bruno was very disrespectful towards Shmuel and how he made Shmuel's life worse while he was living in such bad conditions during this time. Even though it was bad that Bruno was naive during The Boy in The Striped Pajamas. Good things did come from him being naive towards the Holocaust. His friendship with shmuel did become very big and great when he didn't know about what was happening. However, they are wrong because If he didn't become friends with shmuel. He would still be alive and fine and wouldn't have walked right into a gas chamber. This is why it was bad that Bruno was naive. The reasons that show why it was bad that Bruno was naive during The Boy in The Striped Pajamas are. 1st it allowed him to enter Auschwitz concentration camp and interact with others inside the concentration camp. The 2nd reason is he was very disrespectful to Shmuel and didn't know what he was going through and what he had to live in. All these reasons show how it was bad that Bruno was naive during the book The Boy in The Striped Pajamas.
While the adults show their disgust and hatred to the Jews, Bruno doesn't mind them and is nice to Pavel, the Jew that got him the tire, and later becomes friends with Shmuel. Bruno’s father is a soldier and is in charge of the concentration camp. Even with all the Jew hating Germans around him, he still goes out to visit Shmuel and doesn’t let them ruin his friendship. Near the end of the movie Bruno shows his friend how much he cares by entering the camp to help look for Shmuel’s father, who had gone missing. While entering the camp, Bruno learned first hand how bad the camps actually were and wished he hadn’t come. Even with these feelings he still wants to help his friend, which eventually leads to his demise.
The Holocaust was a very sad time in the world. Holocaust was the killing of millions of Jews and other people by the Nazis during World War II. The Nazi who was an army, very powerful and claim control of Germany in January 1933. Their beliefs were that the Germans were the ‘’superior race’’ and that the Jews, deemed "inferior," were an alien threat to the so-called German racial community.
About 11,000,000 people died during the Holocaust, which was organized by Adolf Hitler. Hitler was Chancellor of Germany from 1933-1945 (12 years). There were about 23 main concentration camps during the Holocaust. Auschwitz was one of them. 6,000,000 of the 11,000,000 people that died were Jews. Shmuel could’ve been one of those Jews. Bruno could’ve been one of the other 5,000,000. The book might not have been true, but it was based on the truth. The movie, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is not as good as the book, because the book is more detailed, and interesting.
When Bruno moved to Auschwitz he was completely oblivious to the Holocaust. When he met Shmuel, he became slightly more aware, but couldn’t comprehend what it all meant. It is ironic that his innocence sheltered him from the traumatizing truth of the Holocaust, but it is what killed him in the
One day when Shmuel gets sent to shine glasses at his house him and Bruno start talking. A soldier see them and Bruno told him he didn’t know who he was, and the soldier beats the boy, Bruno feels terrible and want to make it up to Shmuel. Bruno wants to understand why the life behind the fence is so awful and why Shmuel isn’t happy. Bruno thinks it’s not better, but interesting because there are other kids to play with. They form a strong bond that can't be broken by anything and it makes him realize that his friends in Berlin weren't as special as Shmuel is and their friendship. The two boys have been talking and have been friends for about a year and decide that Bruno wants to go on the other side of the fence to see what its like and help him find his papa.
In The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne, a young naive boy, Bruno, tells from his perspective how the occurrences in the Holocaust took place. In 1943, the beginning of the story, Bruno’s father, a commandant in Hitler’s army, is promoted and moves to Oswiecim with his family. Oswiecim is home to the hideous Auschwitz Concentration Camp. While Bruno is out playing near a fence at the edge of Auschwitz Concentration Camp, against his father’s orders, he becomes friends with a young Jewis...
During the rule of Adolf Hitler, many children who were Jewish lived a very frightening and difficult life. They never were given the love and compassion that every child needs and deserves growing up. The Holocaust is a story that will continue to be shared till the end of time.
The Holocaust ended 70 years ago, it involved over 11 million deaths. Hitler blamed all Jews for everything wrong with Germany. The Holocaust was the mass murder of six million Jews and millions of others by the Nazis. They were taken to concentration camps where they were treated like animals. Before the concentration camps, their human rights were taken, and also making them wear gold stars to identify the Jews better and faster. The Jews were taken from camp to camp until they finally arrived to the deadliest camp of them all, Auschwitz. The Holocaust also lasted 12 years from January of 1933 to May 8 of 1945. It all started when Adolf Hitler came into power. The Holocaust should never be forgotten because first of all, there were too many deaths. Second, because they were innocent people who
Bruno is oblivious to discrimination throughout the novel. He’s not be able to identify what is happening around him beating of Pavel, or the treatment of the Jews and how Bruno betrayed Shmuel. These are real reasons why Bruno is oblivious to discrimination.
Bruno's imaginative journey is a flight from reality. It is a classic example of the psychological "fight or flight" syndrome experienced by all animals (including humans) when they are confronted by something of which they are unsure or afraid - something which challenges their current reality. What Boyne does in this story is to use Bruno to show how either approach can be totally destructive: the critical lesson is that we must acknowledge reality and do what we can to remove the fences that would destroy not only ?us? but our entire world.
The father was too enamored with his position as the Commandant to pay any attention to his son. His position as Commandant enabled him to give the order that killed his son. Bruno’s father was responsible for the family moving to Auschwitz, which sparked a chain of events that ultimately caused Bruno’s death. The father was responsible for Bruno’s death in The Boy in the Striped Pajamas.
The Holocaust was one of the most tragic and trying times for the Jewish people. Hundreds of thousands of Jews and other minorities that the Nazis considered undesirable were detained in concentration camps, death camps, or labor camps. There, they were forced to work and live in the harshest of conditions, starved, and brutally murdered. Horrific things went on in Auschwitz and Majdenek during the Holocaust that wiped out approximately 1,378,000 people combined. “There is nothing that compares to the Holocaust.” –Fidel Castro
He never really knew why Shmuel was on the other side of the fence. In the book, Bruno asked his sister, Gretel, “‘Are we Jews?’” (Boyne 182). This shows that Bruno had very little knowledge of what was really happening in Auschwitz and all around the world. Boyne had also made Bruno use a very shameful and inappropriate term in his book.
Bruno is irritated and shocked when he’s told they’re moving from Berlin but being a very naive boy doesn’t understand why their family has to leave. The story follows on as Bruno sets out from his house in Auschwitz to explore and finds a boy the same age as him sitting on the ground, on the other side of a fence. His name is Shmuel, a Jewish boy held captive in a concentration camp, but Bruno believes the camp is just a farm. Their friendship cements but is separated by a barbed wire.
Bruno, an eight year old boy at the time of the war, is completely oblivious to the atrocities of the war around him - even with a father who is a Nazi commandant. The title of the book is evidence to this - Bruno perceives the concentration camp uniforms as "striped pajamas." Further evidence is the misnomers "the Fury," (the Furher) and "Out-With" (Auschwitz). Bruno and Shmuel, the boy he meets from Auschwitz, share a great deal in common but perhaps what is most striking is the childhood innocence which characterizes both boys. Bruno is unaware that his father is a Nazi commandant and that his home is on ther periphery of Auschwitz. Shmuel, imprisoned in the camp, seems not to understand the severity of his situation. When his father goes missing, Shmuel does not understand that he has gone to the gas chamber.