...The Holocaust was a terrible and traumatizing experience for the prisoners, but have you ever thought about what happened to the survivors? How did they get back to their normal lives? Well if you have, you're in luck, I wrote a whole paper on it. Following their liberation, the lives of Holocaust survivors were hurt by long-lasting physical illnesses, mental health issues, and difficulty returning to their lives before their imprisonment. Descendants of the holocaust damaged by physical illnesses caused by the Holocaust. Some Holocaust victims also suffered from mental health issues because of their experiences imprisoned in the camps. They also suffer from not ever able to settle back into normal lives. Overall this essay will be discussing the tragic suffering that took a great toll on holocaust survivors, Specifically with psychological and bodily sicknesses, also including getting back to their normal lives. There were a lot of horrific ways prisoners in the Holocaust were badly altered. One way holocaust prisoners suffered was by mental illnesses because of experiences in the holocaust. An example of this is post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety disorders depression and this sometimes even...
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...judgments of legislation dating back to the early eighteen hundreds established to justify a war or hold individuals accountable for cruel and inhumane treatment during a time of war, but not always adhered to by countries. The United Nations established international laws such as the Nuremberg Principles and the Genocide Convention to hold individual responsible for crimes against humanity. Countries have engaged in war crimes for thousands of years in violation of the established laws and customs of war. Torture, rape, massacres, genocide, and atrocities documented over centuries continue today. This paper will discuss some of the heinous crimes committed during War World II Holocaust and the Hutu massacre of the Tutsis. War Crimes the Executioners and the Victims of Genocide Military powers around the world inflict some of the most atrocious crimes against humanity, and in each case, there are executioners and victims of these crimes that never get fair justice. “ The German concentration camps of World War II, the horrors of the Vietnam War, the prolific rape and brutality during the break- up of the former Yugoslavia and the Hutu massacres of the Tutsis in Rwanda,” ("20th Century," n.d., p. 5) are just a few named conflicts that displayed devastating atrocities. The executioners in the World War II Holocaust and the Hutu Massacres in Rwanda caused terrible massacre to the human race more than any other conflict in history. These crimes all have a negative...
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...The Holocaust Imagine waking up in the middle of the night, to hear the sounds of screaming and thrashing. You look out your window to see Nazis rummaging down the streets taking every Jew in sight. This exact event occurred on the Night of the Broken Glass. Jews lost everything that day and they were sent off to concentration camps (Holocaust). The Holocaust ripped families and lives apart. Where lived a family of six now was an empty home, a lost and lonely casualty of the war. The Nazis treated the Jew’s horribly, although the Liberators of the Holocaust saved the Jews. History of concentration camps through the Holocaust shows how the deadly technology changed. At first concentration camps were made for captives of the...
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...combines enchanting fairy tale elements with realistic historical attributes to create an engaging representation of personal discovery/the horrors that defined the holocaust/OR answer Q. Yolen unfolds her narrative through multiple narrative layers and literary techniques to convey the central ideas of human determination and resilience, and the significance of memory to bring back to life an anonymous past. Through the themes and literary techniques that Yolen utilises, the parallels of Briar Rose to a fairy tale are developed into a family history. Human resilience and the ability to rise above suffering is a significant notion that Yolen powerfully acknowledges in Briar Rose, which also establishes a parallel to the common fairy tale element of good triumphing over evil. This is significantly brought forward through Josef’s vivid illustration of the ugly horrors of war he experienced as a partisan during World War II. Unlike Gemma’s fairy tale, Potocki’s eloquent story in the novel is sustained and uninterrupted, adding a sense of authenticity to his narration and providing a sense of realism to the disturbing and frightening experiences that he and Gemma had survived. It is an honest recollection that does not glorify – portraying the partisans as “survivors, not heroes”, and provides detailed descriptions revolving around the Nazi treatment of prisoners and his experience as a partisan. Through the graphic imagery of “a naked woman tumbled onto the ground… the corpses had...
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...of the darkest of time periods that mankind will ever experience was created from inside from man. One of time periods was named the Holocaust. Considered one of the most horrific events in human history, one was to be found very lucky to have survived such torture and tragedy, if they survivored. One survivor of the Holocaust was a little 15 year old boy named Elie Wiesel, writer of the book Night, of which has to do with his experiences during the Holocaust. In Night, Elie describes just how dark and evil the Holocaust truly was using tragedy, symbolism and tone in his writing. Whomever you...
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...were the reason for Germany's problems. As years went by, Alfons rose through the ranks of the military until the end of the war where realized what atrocities had been committed, he than took off his uniform and went on to help people. On the other side of the spectrum we have Helen Waterford a young Jewish girl who grew up in Frankfurt, Germany. She married Siegfried Wohlfarth and moved to Amsterdam because of tension brewing in Frankfurt. She had a baby girl Doris, whom she gave to friends to protect and guard her so she could going into hiding as a result of the Nazi invasion. She and her husband were found by the Nazis and taken to Birkenau. Birkenau was one of the forty camps at Auschwitz. While at Auschwitz she experienced the horror of the death camps. Eventually she and three hundred other women were...
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...combines enchanting fairy tale elements with realistic historical attributes to create an engaging representation of personal discovery/the horrors that defined the holocaust/OR answer Q. Yolen unfolds her narrative through multiple narrative layers and literary techniques to convey the central ideas of human determination and resilience, and the significance of memory to bring back to life an anonymous past. Through the themes and literary techniques that Yolen utilises, the parallels of Briar Rose to a fairy tale are developed into a family history. Human resilience and the ability to rise above suffering is a significant notion that Yolen powerfully acknowledges in Briar Rose, which also establishes a parallel to the common fairy tale element of good triumphing over evil. This is significantly brought forward through Josef’s vivid illustration of the ugly horrors of war he experienced as a partisan during World War II. Unlike Gemma’s fairy tale, Potocki’s eloquent story in the novel is sustained and uninterrupted, adding a sense of authenticity to his narration and providing a sense of realism to the disturbing and frightening experiences that he and Gemma had survived. It is an honest recollection that does not glorify – portraying the partisans as “survivors, not heroes”, and provides detailed descriptions revolving around the Nazi treatment of prisoners and his experience as a partisan. Through the graphic imagery of “a naked woman tumbled onto the ground… the corpses had...
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...English, Block B February 26, 2024 Justice For Jews: The Liberation of Concentration Camps in Europe If you were to endure years of extreme, inhumane treatment from an overpowering regime- just because you’d be considered a minority- how would you imagine yourself feeling the moment of liberation? Take a moment to picture this in your mind: after being in the concentration camp where you’d starve, be mistreated, and abused, you hear rumors of foreign troops on their way to free you. Consequently, upon hearing this, the cruel Nazi leaders tried to move you all from the camp, where hundreds died on these death marches, and yet they still tried to destroy all the evidence of their crimes that they could. The soldiers came and freed all the people in the...
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...The Holocaust: Effects of Dehumanization in Art Spiegelman’s Maus War broke out in Europe in September of 1939. Everything went downhill from then, Germans began to take over and minorities such as Jews were quickly forced to go to concentration camps, these horrible camps were stationed all over Europe. One of the main camps in Poland was Auschwitz. Opened in May 1940, it was an extermination camp located in southern Poland in a small town named Oswiecim. The camp consisted of three separate camps not far from one another so that communication could be kept between them. These three camps included: Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II–Birkenau and Auschwitz III–Monowitz. Auschwitz I was classified as the base camp where prisoners mainly worked, Auschwitz II–Birkenau was the main extermination camp where prisoners went to die in a variety of ways after being too weak to work, and Auschwitz III–Monowitz another labor camp, which held prisoners who worked at a German chemical factory, IG Farben. The killing methods ranged from being lined up at a wall and shot to being put into ‘showers’ that realized a toxic gas. Once the prisoners were dead, they were then burned in the crematoriums at the camp. Essentially the prisoners of the labor and death camps were treated as objects and not as the humans that they were. Many might even go as far as refer to the Germans as heartless for doing the things that they did to the innocent Jews and other monitories. Art Spiegelman’s Maus shows...
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...atrocities of the Holocaust. ‘Night’ is set during the Holocaust time period in 1944–45, toward the end of the World War Two. It mainly takes place in Auschwitz and Buchenwald which are both Nazi Germany concentration camps. The memoir depicts his experiences with his father in those concentration camps. ‘Night’ takes the reader on a journey where Eliezer, who was only 15 and his family, along with many other Jews, were forcibly removed from their hometown and transported to Auschwitz and Buchenwald. He wrote about their battle for survival, and of his battle with God for a way to understand the spiteful cruelty he witnesses each day as well as his increasing disgust with humanity due to the inhumane treatment of the Jews and how they were...
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...The events of the Holocaust and those of industrial animal slaughterhouses bear a multitude of bone chilling similarities. The most prominent being the presence of death on a large and mechanized scale. Through a post-humanist standpoint that rejects notions of anthropocentrism and human exceptionalism, the Holocaust and industrial slaughter houses are easily comparable and both instances of genocidal horror. A post-humanist view accepts that animals and humans have the same right to live a life free of suffering and murder, on the platform that they are sentient beings and cannot be placed on a moral hierarchy that positions them as less than the human species. This position also acknowledges the interconnectedness and similarities between...
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...The Loss of Humanity In the Death camps the victims lost their humanity through their horrible treatment. The Nazis lost theirs through their actions. During the holocaust the humanity of the people affected changed. In the book Night, Elie Wiesel recounts how the guards lost their humanity, through the horrors that they put him through. In the reading from Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand the prisoners were humiliated and tortured to death. The horrible lack of humanity that the guards possesed can be found not only in concentration camps during the holocaust, but all around the world at many different times. When people stop seeing others as equals, or fellow humans they begin to lose their humanity. While at a japanese prisoner camp louie and phil were degraded and tortured on a daily basis, “Every day, at gunpoint, Louie was forced to stand up and dance, staggering through Charleston while his guards roared with laughter”(Hillenbrand 1). The guards showed no sympathy towards the prisoners they were draconian. Because Japan was at war with the United States the guards saw all of the United States citizens as enemies. They begin to lose their humanity when they do this. To add to that, the hate that they have towards the prisoners just fuels the other sides hate. War...
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...Rubenstein encounters such opinion; he met other German clergymen who shared the same opinion and admits that the tendency to believe that God has had a unique relationship with the Jews exists also among the Jewish people. According to that, Rubenstein then states that “the idea that the Nazi slaughter of the Jews was somehow God’s will, that God really wanted the Jewish People to be exterminated.” Rubenstein’s belief in the evil of the Holocaust is opposed by the Dean’s idea of God’s absolute power over human lives and his just intentions. He says, “When God desires my death, I give it to him…For some reason, it was part of God’s plan that the Jews died. God demands our death daily. He is the Lord, He is the...
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...American Films of all time, recipient of over 20 awards and nominated for over 35. Schindler’s List is debatably one of the overall best films of the 20th century. Good evening ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the Brisbane Film Festival for 2015. Schindler’s List was released in 1993 produced by legendary director Steven Spielberg and is a film about the horrors the Jewish people faced during the late 30s and early 40s, mainly focussing on the Holocaust and the part Oskar Schindler, a German businessman, played in freeing and saving over one thousand Jewish lives. Oskar Schindler starts off as a wealthy business owner and entrepreneur who is an acclaimed member of the Nazi Party at the beginning of the film who is interested in making more money for himself. He purchases an Enamelware factory in Kraców with the help of Itzhak Stern, a local Jewish official, who has contacts with black marketeers and the Jewish business community. With the help of Stern and the business...
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...The Pianist is a historically based film that captivates the audience with its intense, riveting scenes. The movie outlines Hitler’s policies against the Jewish race during the holocaust in the late 1930’s. It focuses on the lives of one particular Jewish family during the period in which Hitler invades and occupies the Polish community of Warsaw. The title was inspired by the career of the main character before and after the Holocaust. The film chronicles the experiences of a Jewish pianist and his survival through the Holocaust with determination and the help of others, while millions of other Jews perish. The theme is portrayed effectively throughout the movie. The merciless treatment of the Jewish people convinces the audience to empathize with the characters in the movie. The movie begins with the pianist, Szpilman, in the studio playing the piano while the community of Warsaw is being bombed. The first scene in the film is a montage of grainy black and white scenes of Polish life before the Nazi invasion of Poland. The footage shows a dated world with old European style building and technology, people are shown walking around the town in aged clothing. The grainy dated look of the film also makes the scenes appear gloomy but relaxed at the same time. These images are used to drive the notion that it is set in a time long ago, in a different era. This scene is a critical part in the film as it refines the time and emotion, in which the film is set, so the audience can relate...
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