Have you ever read the book The Boy in the Striped Pajamas? It is a good book, but it isn’t really the right fit for a 7th grader. I don’t think that this book should be read next year. In the book The Boy in the Striped Pajamas there is a little boy named Bruno, and he is a German boy whose dad is a Nazi soldier. He is forced to move by the concentration camp Auschwitz(Out-With). And he is a boy who is very curious and wants to explore his new home. While exploring his new house he encounters a fence, and at the fence there is a young Jewish boy Shmuel. Bruno is only able to play with Shmuel from their own sides of the fence. But at the same time Bruno is very naive and he doesn’t know lots of things. He and Shmuel try to get together and …show more content…
Many stories are often told in a Jewish person’s account. It is able to tell what the German child’s life is like. Because people often think that the German’s were the bad people and the Jewish people were the victims. In this book you were able to tell how the German’s actually felt and how they portrayed the story. These reasons might be true, but the book could have done a better job at showing the Germans lifestyle when tell the story. They were very vague and don’t give a whole lot of description. Since the book was wrote in a child’s perspective; the child was very naive and doesn’t exactly know what is entirely happening in this time or war. As you can see, this book does show that it is in a German boy’s perspective, but it lacks a lot of strong info and it is very …show more content…
While reading this book if you do not have any background knowledge you would not know many things that this book is referring to. For example, on page 47 it is talking about how Bruno wishes to go home but his father says, “And our family is here, Bruno. At Out-With. Ergo this must be our home.”. Which is saying that their home is at “Out-With”, and if you didn’t have any background knowledge you would not know that “Out-With” is really Auschwitz. Another example is, on page 116 it is talking about how Hitler also known as the Fuhrer is coming to Bruno’s house for supper. In the book it says, “The Fury had something he wants to discuss with me…”. In the book it refers to Hitler and/or The Fuhrer to “The Fury”. If you had no background knowledge about the book you would perhaps think the his name is actually “The Fury”. To conclude, this book requires a lot of background knowledge to be able to understand what is happening in the book. But with the new curriculum you are to read the book all at once and if you read this book you would not be able to discuss what is going on in the book. You wouldn’t know what “The Fury” is or what “Out-With” really
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas (2008) follows a Nazi family who moves to the countryside while the father carries out an assignment at Auschwitz. At times heartwarming and other times brutal, it walks the line between dark and kitschy, offering a profound moral to its story while managing to seem irreverent. Bruno, a boy of eight years old, completes the twelve stages of the Hero’s Journey in a way that illustrates a thoughtful commentary on the interplay between ignorance and the truth. Ultimately, however, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is an allegory about social boundaries and the consequences of transgressing them.
Background info: The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne follows nine-year old Bruno as he unknowingly moves to a home near a concentration camp. There he meets a Jewish boy of the exact same age named Shmuel.
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas by John Boyne is a story that tells of the holocaust through the eyes of a child, Bruno, a boy who discovers a peculiar friend that lives a strange existence on the other side of the adjoining wire fence. The important ideas presented in the novel are cruelty, discrimination, and abusive power, the holocaust from a child’s perspective and the misinterpretations from a child who gradually discovers the world to be not as enjoyable as he thought. Using some of these ideas listed above the storyline of the book gradually becomes more evident and keeps you interested in the book to finding that the story is of the holocaust and how the Jews were once treated, last century.
How would you have felt, to be living in Germany during one of the most sad times in World’s History? If you were either German and you got to live free, or you were inferior to the Germans such as Jews that were killed off. Hitler planned to kill people inferior to him off and no one really knows the reason for him doing it. Well this is the story of a little boy named Bruno who befriends a jewish boy named Shmuel during the time of WWII.
"Who are all those people? And what are they all doing there?" (4.190), Bruno asks. This is what the book, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, is based on. It informs the reader that the holocaust occurred. Who were these people, and what were they doing there? There are many examples on why it was a bad thing that Bruno was oblivious about the Holocaust. The holocaust was a gruesome time where Jews were killed for their beliefs. The leader of the Nazi party was Hitler. He believed that Jews were bad people and they should be punished for their crimes. This started a period of time where Jews were rounded up and put into concentration camps to later be killed or put to do the hard work that no one else wanted to do. Bruno lived during
Firstly, the book Once teaches students about historical events that take place during WWII. The force of the Nazis is demonstrated in the novel when they didn’t let anything interfere with their schedule and purpose. Felix, Chaya and Zelda risked their lives and jumped out of a Nazi controlled train that they had been squashed in for hours. This shows the desperate measures the living Jewish had to do to survive. Also, the children and adult starved on limited food supplies. This book gives high school students an excellent understanding of events that took place during the brutal WWII.
Mark Herman's "The Boy in the Striped Pajamas", Based on John Boyne's best-selling novel, depicts the Holocaust through the eyes of an innocent 8-year-old boy- Bruno. The film is set during World War 2 and explores the themes of prejudice, racism, war, innocence and friendship in the year 1944. The story asks the hypothetical question of what life would be like for the family of a concentration camp commandant, with an immediate response from viewers asking, Should we care? When his Father, a high-ranking SS officer, is relocated to Heidelberg, Bruno and his family are forced to relocate to the countryside.
As a child, we are focused on the small aspects of life. We worry about eating ice cream on a hot summer day or when we will get the opportunity to go out on a cold snowy day and go sled riding with our friends and drink hot chocolate. We are fully focused on such basic childlike desires that we are completely unaware of serious events happening around us or in this case right next-door. As a nine-year-old boy, Bruno has no idea that his father was running a mass concentration camp right next door to his house and exterminating Jews including his new friend Shmuel. Instead, Bruno acquired an irreproachable friendship due to his innocent way of thinking that allowed for him to ignore society’s prejudices against his Jewish friend Shmuel. This essay will provide information regarding the Holocaust and hash treatment of the Jews within the German concentration camp “Auschwitz”. This essay will then offer a brief summary of the events within The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne. Finally, this essay will analyze the paradox of innocence depicted within the story, in order to explain how innocence supplied both disadvantages and advantages for Bruno and Shmuel. While this innocence led to the death of Bruno and Shmuel due to their ignorance of the dangers of the Holocaust, it also allowed for the boys to live their lives unaware of
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is a novel by John Boyne that has recently been turned into a film. It tells the story of a young German boy (Bruno), and a Jewish boy (Shmuel)’s “forbidden” friendship. Bruno, located on the opposite side of a huge barbed-wire fence that guards the concentration camp where Shmuel is confined, has never had a friend he can’t play with. Throughout the novel, their friendship grows and both boys learn very important lessons. When the novel was made into a film, a few things were changed, some were
The boy in the Striped Pajamas. A book written by John Boyne; and published on January 5th, 2006. This is a medium sized novel that gives a brief understanding of how a young Jewish Boy that goes by the name Shmuel; and how he lives on a day to day basis. He was enslaved and shipped off by a Anti-Jewish Military in Germany (also known as the Nazi’s) whilst in World War II to a Concentration Camp in Berlin, they believed that no Jewish people are right; they’re all wrong and inhumane. There was once a sullen, and very innocent boy that goes by the name Bruno. He was not enslaved by the Germans for two reasons, He’s not Jewish and his dad is a Lieutenant General work for the Nazi’s, Bruno and Shmuel were both friends; They couldn’t interact
The boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne, is definitely a must read. This book is based around a worldly issue that took place in Germany during the 1930’s and 1940’s (which was the Holocaust). I loved this book because it shows a different side of the topic. The story is portrayed in a more emotional sense which makes it all the more worthwhile to read. The boy in the Striped Pajamas is a must read novel because of the emotional viewpoint of the book, how well the book is written from the perspective of a nine year-old boy, Bruno, as well as the detail and accuracy that is incorporated into the book. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is a must read novel
The book The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas by John Boyne is a fictional story about the Holocaust. It accurately describes the event through the eyes of a young child. Bruno does not understand what is going on around him and believes his father is a good soldier. However he fails to realize that his father is very high up in power with the fight to end Jews lives. Bruno and his sister Gretel, live in Berlin but after the night the Fury comes for supper their life changes. There whole family is moved to a smaller house, near a whole bunch of huts. The children get a tutor so they still get an education. After one particular lesson Bruno is bored, so he decides to do some exploring. He has been told not to go near the fence, but the curiosity
The irony of the situation, a child whose father runs a German death camp, creates emphasis on the ignorance of a child. Bruno’s misunderstandings of what is going on in the war causes
The Holocaust was a terrible and depressing time during history. There were millions of people recklessly murdered, women and children included, just because of their religion, or because one person decided that he didn’t like them, or that they were a threat. They were thrown into concentration camps where all they did was suffer, work, and eventually, be killed. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas follows a boy whose father was a commandant of Auschwitz. Auschwitz was the largest, and most famous, of the death camps the Nazi’s (people who followed Hitler, the leader of the Holocaust). The boy, Bruno, meets a boy named Shmuel that lives in Auschwitz. Bruno and Shmuel soon become friends, and decide to go on a ‘final adventure’ together to try
They say that ignorance is bliss. That is somewhat true, as not understanding the atrocities in our world would surely make a happier person. However, innocence can also lead to calamity. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, by John Boyne, is a coming of age story about Bruno, the son of a Nazi Commandant under Adolf Hitler. Bruno was initially very ignorant of what was happening in the world and was very immature about moving from Berlin. As the days went by, he got used to his new home and his thoughts were maturing, as he started thinking with logic and rationale. Bruno finally understands that he has to be a good person to everyone regardless what others might think. His character has strongly developed. Despite Bruno being unaware of his situation and his father being a Nazi, he matures from being childish and unsatisfied for moving to finally finding purpose in life by being a good human being.