The Aftermath of the Holocaust for Jews
Caleb R. Mr. Hyde
Core 1
March 16, 2023
Most people who think about the Holocaust believe that the Allies went into the concentration camps, set them free and it was all sunshine and rainbows. Well, that is not even close to the truth. After all the atrocities committed by the Nazis during the Holocaust, Jews were traumatized psychically, emotionally, and mentally. Surviving the Holocaust was just the first chapter Jews would take on. Survivors would now need to return to phase one of life. Jews needed to regain their humanity and identity. Survivors came back to a society where they would soon realize what they used to have is all gone. Homes, families, jobs, everything was
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As the war was coming to an end, the Allies found out that the Nazis put the Jews on a “Death March” westward into the heart of Germany. Death Marches occurred in the summer of 1944. This was Germany's plan to evacuate all of the concentration camps to bring the Jews further into Germany. The Nazis believed strongly that the Third Reich would survive the war. If that did happen the Nazis would continue their plans of eliminating all the Jews. Around a total of 250,000 Jews died during death marches (Liberation and Survival). This event was crucial because Germany was trying to prevent the Allies from taking the Jews away. Germany did this so they could continue labor in Germany, keep eliminating Jews and overall win the war. This affected the Jews majorly mentally and …show more content…
Victims of the Holocaust wanted to testify but all of their testimonies were completely ignored. Not just that but Jews were also at the bottom of the restitution, which many believe is preposterous. (Rebuilding Lives). This evidence exemplifies how the Jews were affected after the holocaust. It claims that Jews were trying to get their word out to the world and the court ignored them. Experts believe that countries that allowed Jews to immigrate did a really good job overall. But experts saw a category that lacked majorly in the long term. Many Jews in the Holocaust experienced physical, mental, and emotional health problems in the long