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Elie Wiesel's Boy In The Striped Pajamas

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“We don’t have the luxury of thinking… Some people make all the decisions for us” (Boyne 13). Although a work of fiction, this quote from Boy in the Striped Pajamas accurately depicts the mindset of many people during the Holocaust, especially children. Children of the Holocaust endured many horrific events that irrevocably changed their lives. Life before concentration camps were calm, and there was a sense of peace within the country. They experienced much persecution with the events revolving around the German camps. Through many events, the children’s lives were changed by the many occurrences. About 1.5 million children and teenagers were funneled through the camps, and only around 105,000 survived (“Children”). For the Jews, life before …show more content…

German masterminds such as Adolf Hitler, Hermann Goering, Heinrich Himmler, and Joseph Goebbels gained the support of many Germans by using propaganda and fear (source). They used propaganda to inform the people that their way of thinking was correct. These men pushed their way of thought into the community members. Influential officials also used a scare tactic. They would discriminate, persecute, outcast those who believed differently than they did. At the end of the day, if you instill fear in people they are likely to do what you force them to partake …show more content…

Liberation day was a big day in the life of the concentration camp prisoners. This was the day they regained their freedoms that had vanished years before. (add liberation quote) Liberation day was time for the people kept captive to get help but it was also a time where the liberators eyes were opened to the horrific events that took place while the camps were up and in full operation; the mental picture of corpses that lie in piles was engraved in the minds of the liberators (“Liberation”). Even though this new found freedom was a good thing it was also just the beginning to the rest of their lives and the hardships that were yet to come. The 415 Jewish children that survived Auschwitz were sent into a new world; yet they had mental, physical, and family travesties ahead to overcome (“Liberation”). These children had tremendous obstacles in their future, but also had new adventures and freedoms that they had never before been allowed to partake

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