Escaping The Holocaust
The Holocaust is known today as one of the most horrifying acts to take place, resulting in the deaths of millions. While the result was catastrophic, there were many people that were able to escape the grasp of the Nazis. It was not easy with the Nazi regime growing at a rapid rate, allowing no one to get away not even infant children. In fact in order to hide the children many were “kept in cellars and attics, where they had to keep quiet, even motionless, for hours on end. In rural areas, hidden children lived in barns, chicken coops, and forest huts” as said in an article written on the United States Holocaust Memorial website. The most logical way many were able to escape the Nazis was through hiding. There are
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Also stating that in “1943, 38 Jews hid beneath the wheat fields of Western Ukraine”. This was just one spot that many were forced to hide to go undetected. The Stermer family, and several other Jewish families had taken refuge in the cave during World War II. Resources were very scarce “they’d been fortunate to find an underground freshwater lake, but food was more difficult”(listverse). Many were not able to survive the long durations with no food throughout the time of the holocaust, starvation was one of the main causes of death in many especially children. At times it may have been very difficult to cope, “The men of the group had to go above ground to bargain for grain or steal vegetables. Dough and roots were almost their entire diet...The hideaways suffered from scurvy and lost up to a third of their bodyweight”.(No place on earth) When the Germans were finally forced away by the Red Army, the family was then free. They were all able to survive these events but coping was difficult, “It was unbelievable to think that I could go outside, go around in daylight, and nobody was going to kill me,” said Shulim Stermer. This was a miracle in a time of crisis, after spending a remarkable 511 days in the