When I hear the word “Holocaust” I am always devastated that they actually said that word. In my opinion The Holocaust was a terrible thing; I can’t even believe that it happened. The Holocaust should have not happened. It should have been stopped before it happened. It was probably one of the worst things that humankind has ever done. Millions of Jews, Catholics, Gypsies, and even Germans were persecuted and killed. But unfortunately we have not learned from it, a lot people are still racist. It happens everywhere. I think that a lot more people need to realize that what they are doing is not right thing. People should pay the consequences. I think more people should be aware of this and should be stopped.…
The Holocaust was traumatizing event in the 1900s. It was a life changing event for the Jews. This time period went down in history. Rudolf Hoss, estimated during Nuremberg Trial that nearly three million people died while being held hostage in death camps. Also, ninety percent of the ones killed were known as Jews. In death camps the people who were known as “different” suffered from cruel treatment, harsh environment and immoral medical experiments.…
The Holocaust is often defined as the brutal killing of about eleven million innocent people because of a racial prejudice against the Jewish race. This tragic occurrence was conducted by the awful and merciless dictator known as Adolf Hitler. The Jewish people were not the “perfect” race that Adolf Hitler wanted to create. He contradicted himself because not even he fell under the requirements that it took to become this perfect race. The Jewish people, such as ones that were only small babies and the elderly, were inhumanly killed in multiple ways. One example of this brutal killing of the innocent was when small children could be ripped away from their parents to be sent to the work camps that were scattered throughout the country of Germany. These work camps often worked the children so hard that a because of their lack of food and water killed them. This thing that these innocent people endured inside of these ruthless work camps is sometimes unimaginable to the human mind.…
The Holocaust is considered the greatest act of hate and anti-Semitism in modern history. This relentless act of hate and genocide was made possible by the Nazi party under Adolf Hitler’s orders carried out by Heinrich Himmler to exterminate Jews and other minorities. The Holocaust is responsible for over 9 million people (an estimate of 6 million people murdered were Jews). Because the Holocaust was so insidious, this part of history cannot be forgotten to prevent these atrocities from ever happening. The book Night by Elie Weisel shows some infamous reasons why the Holocaust should never be forgotten.…
Thornton heavily emphasizes the image of the Holocaust during Carlos’ stay at Amos and Sara’s refuge. Amos shares his and Sara’s experiences in Auschwitz with Carlos through his “...picture of people with no hair who looked like skeletons...either crying or laughing.” (78) The skeletons in the photograph, Amos and Sara, were liberated from the concentration camp and survived by maintaining hope in a future despite all the horrors that surrounded them. Sasha, the daughter of a friend of Amos and Sara’s, has her story told as well by Amos who explains that she “...offended a guard by asking for something to drink when she had a fever. He cut out her tongue with a bayonet and threw it in a refuse heap where a rat appeared to run off with it to his burrow.” (78) She still held onto hope despite the torture, pain, possibility of death, and eventual muteness. Sara, Amos, and Sasha were some of the few who survived the Holocaust with their hope and belief intact. They held onto their hope following the nightmare they were forced to live through and continued to maintain it throughout their lives thus giving them meaning and reason to live.…
During the Second World War, over 6 million Jews, homosexuals, blacks and many other groups were killed by Nazis in the holocaust. In all, an estimated 11 million civilians and prisoners of war were murdered by Nazi regime. We should remember the holocaust because it is the greatest mass murder in the history of the world and that no one should ever go through that kind of pain and suffering ever again.…
There have been many major events in the world's history; some are brilliant discoveries, and some are incredibly tragic. One of the biggest tragedies in the world was The Holocaust which took place in Nazi Germany and other territories Germany took over from 1933-1945. The Holocaust was the result of Hitler’s anti-semitism from his belief that the Jewish people were the cause of all of Germany’s problems. Hitler made the Jewish people the scapegoat of all of the country's struggles and with the help of the SS and Nazi army, he was able to almost carry out his “final solution” plan to terminate all the jewish people, resulting in between five million and six million Jews were killed. The Nazi’s thought the Jews were inferior and scapegoated…
The Holocaust is one of the most horrific events in modern history. It is estimated around 11 million Jews were killed during the time frame of the Holocaust (Wegner G.). That time frame spans from 1933 when Hitler became Chancellor of Germany to 1945 when WWII ended. During that time period Jews, cripples, mentally handicapped, Jehovah witnesses, homeless, homosexuals and many other undesirables were removed to purify the Aryan race and to advance the German people or so it was believed.…
The Holocaust was one of the most disturbing and petrifying eras of all time. The holocaust, one of the most famous genocides in the world, has showed the world what the evils of man can do to mankind. It was the genocide that killed approximately six million Jews and millions of others in a state-sponsored murder by Nazi Germany led by Adolf Hitler. In a book review of “The Holocaust” by Gilbert Martin, Martin says that, “The Holocaust is the definitive account of what is the most horrifying crime ever committed against humanity”. This brutal torture affected many Jews living in Europe, physically and mentally.…
The Holocaust serves as a brutal reminder what can happen when one group of individuals stops seeing another group as human beings. Don’t let the forgotten war be forgotten. “I spent my boyhood behind the barbed wire fences of American internment camps and that part of my life is something that I wanted to share with more people.” -George Takei. Although these tragic accidents happened if survivors never said made their voice heard, people would have never know what they went through and think it’s just another thing that’s…
The Holocaust is arguably the world’s vastest tragedy. The estimated number or Jews killed by the Nazi ranges from 5 to 6 million. These people did nothing wrong and no race deserves to be eliminated. The Jews were treated like animals. Anyone that…
The Holocaust systematically murdered 11 million people across Europe, more than half of those people were Jewish. The Jews were blamed for the German’s failures, such as World War I. As a result, Hitler established anti-Semitism throughout his army and the majority of Europe. The Holocaust consisted of three phases to annihilate the Jews. The phases did not create racial purity and they did not successfully annihilate all of the Jews as the Nazi party planned.…
In “Night” by Elie Wiesel I learned that the history behind the Holocaust is very inhumane. For example, in the Holocaust a total of 1.1million children were killed. The children were not killed in a very gentle way, they were worked to death,gassed, and cremated. Another example, most people think that Jews were the only victim to the Holocaust. This statement is proven to be wrong because the Nazi’s persecuted homosexuals,the disabled,gypsies and non Aryans. In addition, when selection came, the fit were put back to work;the elderly and disabled were sent to be killed. Another fact is that Auschwitz was the largest camp there was, It contained 3 camps within itself. Auschwitz was the worst camp to be put in. The condition in the camps were…
¨How does one mourn for six million people who died? How many candles does one light? How many prayers does one recite? Do we know how to remember the victims, their solitude, their helplessness? They left without a trace, and we are their trace,¨ (Elie Wiesel). Millions dead, 1.5 million were children; they were tortured and starved to death. Some say that nobody really died, that the genocide didn't happen, that the Holocaust didn't exist. However, Evidence proves those few people wrong. The Holocaust did happen, and went it ended it took millions of people down with it. Scarred for life, the survivors have shared their war stories and have shared their grief with the world. Never again will they be able to close their eyes without seeing…
The Holocaust was a horrifying and devastating time. Hitler and the Nazis had taken over many countries and had planned for world domination. When people think about the Holocaust they think that Hitler and the Nazis were the only ones to blame, but Hitler could not have pulled off the Holocaust without the unwitting help of residents, Europeans, and leaders of other countries.…