Would I have hidden from the Nazis? Yes, I would have hidden from the Nazis because I wouldn’t want to suffer with my family, and other people for consequences that we didn’t do or commit. If we would have hidden from the Nazis we would have safer not by a lot , but still a little safer. Living cut off from the rest of the world would be very hard for us. It would be very hard for us because everyday we think that they are coming for us or hear us. Going into hiding is a very big deal. We must stay silent, still, alerted, and trying to have faith. (page 10)
When everyone heard that Nazis and Germans were going to start taking Jew to camps to help make or do things for the World War II. Many people just stayed in their homes waiting for
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Mainly every home was searched for Jewish men. They thought they could trust people, but their “helpful” neighbor ratted them out. Jews have suffered way too much. These things went bad for them their houses and businesses were destroyed, and also they had gotten arrested and beaten. Some groups of Jews had to face their consequences for their “ Abominable crimes”. (Page 169 SS)
If we weren’t hiding from the Nazis and Germans police they would of taken us faster to camps, or ship us back. Us along with other people are suffering of hunger, disease, beaten, and cold wheaters. All these things would have happened if we weren’t hiding. Who knows we could of been the first one to ones killed or shipped back. If Jewish people weren’t hiding they would have got killed, or beaten essayer. I guess some Jews didn’t want to make the Nazis even more furious by hiding.
This is why we choose hiding not to make the Nazis mad, but to be a little safer. Also, to spend more time with my family. No Jews would ever want to suffer as much as they did in camps. Even if it's a camp either way you are gonna die. Families were separated some to the left and some to the right. Every Jewish were facing consequences for the crimes they didn’t do. Other thing is that they lost their
The holocaust, or Shoah was a systematic, planned program of genocide to exterminate all Jews. This government based program was carried out by Hitler, and its allies in the Nazi army during world war two. Approximately 6 million Jews were killed, and if the murder of the Romani, Soviet civilians and prisoners, the disabled, homosexuals, and others who apposed to Hitler’s religious, political and social views were counted, this number would be more like 11 to 17 million. The holocaust is generally described with two periods, 1933-1939, and 1939-1945, the end of WWII.
The nazi did many things to make the jews feel less human and more like “things”. One way was they were taken from their home no explanation, no reason just told them to get their belongings. They only gave them 24hr to get a small bag of their belongings. “I have terrible news ; deportation.
Imagine witnessing the systematic killing of six million Jewish men, women, and children. It doesn’t sound real when you first hear it, but, trust me, it is very real. The Germans committed mass genocide on the Jews and then tried to hide all of it, realizing the atrocious deed that they had done. They tried to silence all those poor souls who mercilessly died without doing anything. Very few survived this large killing.
World War II was a time of crisis and genocide for Nazi Germany. Many jews were sent to concentration camps where they were most likely murdered. For some jews they went into hiding to escape the Nazis. A girl named Anne Frank and her family were Jewish and hid in the Secret Annex from 1942-1944 when they were eventually caught. The Secret Annex was located in a warehouse where a German family helped the Franks and another Jewish family, the van Pels. Each day they had to be quiet in the mornings to make sure the warehouse workers did not hear them. People who helped the jews put their lives in danger is if they were caught, they also would be sent to a concentration camp to receive the same fate. They provided food, clothes, and books for
The first reason the Ten Boom family should have hidden the Jews is it was the right thing to do. The Nazi’s persecuting the Jews is wrong so someone has to help them. The Jews do not deserve to die just because their belief. They had plenty of room for them in their gigantic house. Their home was
Six million people, who were all Jews from men and women to children and infants, suffered grievous oppression. Those were six million people who were innocently murdered. Not only that, but those six million people were the primary victims courtesy of a despotic Nazi assassination. This is the scenery of the Holocaust, a 4-year period of a systematically brutal decimation of Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, and so on and so forth. The Jews fled from Germany clandestinely to make sure that. According to the evidence amassed with the sources given, the Holocaust started through unchecked patriotism.
When the invasion on Poland began, people were running, screaming, and try to find a place to stay safe from the Nazis. Later during the Holocaust war, most of the Jews that were not captured hid in barns, attics, basements, barns, churches and even in the forest. People would risk their life to go and steal food for themselves or their family’s when the Nazi soldiers were on patrol. Jews would spend years in safe houses and trying to steal food and sometimes when they went out to get food, they never came back. Risk takers and safe houses were the two difficult things to do in order to survive during the holocaust
The tenBooms should not have hidden he Jews because of The Germans, A System, and God. It matters to the descendants of the Jews that they protected, because if the hadn’t chosen to hide them, they would not be alive
During World War II, the Jewish race was one of the most persecuted of all the minorities harassed by Hitler and the Third Reich, and a day to day basis, Jews across Europe lived in constant fear, wondering if today would be their last. Especially in cities close to the expanding Nazi empire, there was no telling when their last breath would come. In the memoir, the closely knitted town of Sighet is controlled by the Germans, leaving anyone of Jewish descent to obey their commands in total fear of their personal safety. Elie Wiesel describes this genuine fear when he wakes up a close friend of his father, “‘Get up sir, get up!...You're going to be expelled from here tomorrow with your whole family, and all the rest of the Jews…’ Still half asleep he stared at me with terror-stricken eyes.”
In such a small country it would be hard not to be caught. In conclusion, there were many places to hide during the war, but in such a small place it was easy to search. During the Holocaust, there were many people in need of rescuing and there were people that were brave enough to save Jews. According to author Allison Friedman, “Leo heard voices and heavy footsteps coming from the deck above. German soldiers, he realized, were boarding the boat for inspection” (9).
In many cases, hidden Jewish families were saved, but in others, like Anne Frank, they were eventually caught and killed. Furthermore, the consequences of inaction are even worse. You never want to become a helpless bystander who watches violations of humanity. If I have learned anything it is that when you take action, you know you are doing it for a good reason, even if you get in trouble. If you are a bystander, not only are you watching people get hurt, but you are doing it for selfish
In both Legend and during the Holocaust, people had to hide in order to survive. Vladek hid in underground bunkers and anywhere else he could find and Day hid anywhere could find also. June used disguises to hid to blend in with people from the lake sector and Vladek used them to hide from the government. Shop owners will help Vladek escape and people from the
First, forced to leave your home and everything they worked for to move into a
The Holocaust was the murder and persecution of approximately 6 million Jews and many others by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. The Nazis came to power in Germany in January of 1933. The Nazis thought that the “inferior” Jews were a threat to the “racially superior” German racial community. The death camps were operated from 1941 to 1945, and many people lost their lives or were forced to work in concentration camps during these years. The story leading up to the Holocaust, how the terrible event affected people’s lives, and how it came to and end are all topics that make this historic event worth learning about.
The Holocaust is a very large topic with many subtopics within, which many people have never heard of. One in particular is the Hidden Children of the Holocaust. Like a majority of individuals, I never heard of this topic before, until I started my inquiry work. Hiding children during the holocaust was an effort to save thousands of children’s lives. The children were hidden in different ways, either with false identities, underground, and with or without their parents. The children with false identities were allowed to participate in everyday life activities, like attend school and socialize with children their age, which in the long run this lead to less emotional and mental issues. However, the children that were hidden and not allowed to leave their hiding spots often faced boredom, pain, and torment. Some children were capable of being hid with their parents while other children were not. Depending on the situation the child was in, depends on the effects it had on the child during this time. In this paper, I will be discussing works by two scholars, Natalia Aleksiun’s Gender and Daily Lives of Jews in Hiding in Eastern Galicia and Judy Mitchell’s Children of the Holocaust. Aleksiun’s article talks about the daily lives of Jews in hiding and also about how they prepared their hideouts. Aleksiun’s article mainly focuses on children that were hidden with their families. In Mitchell’s article, he focuses on the hidden children and gives examples/survivor stories on what it