The Invisible Wall Conclusion

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Most people have heard of the holocaust, but what about Jewish persecution during WW1 ultimately leading to the holocaust. The Invisible Wall, by Harry Bernstein is a book that is in the perspective of a Young Jewish boy just before World war 1. Harry and his family live in a small English mill town. This book tells the story of Harry 's life growing up across the street from Christian. He was very poor and did not have a very involved father. In the book religious tensions was a large concept. Therefore, The Jews and the Christians did not get along very well. The Jewish Virtual Library thinks that the tensions were because it has been that way for so long nobody knew any different.The deep reason of tenison 's is because the Christian church claimed that the Jewish religion was not a new religion. The Jews thought that Jesus was not the one chosen savior, but that he promised The Son of David. (¨Christianity¨). This compares to the book because Harry and his family live across the street from Christians. Jews live on one side of the street while Christians live on the other separating them with some invisible wall. This helps you understand the history in this book and making sure that this book is reliable on their facts. The Jews used to …show more content…

In conclusion, The religions, Christianity and Judaism have never really gotten along very well and there were tensions that would lead to problems in the future. Jewish people were lower on the Social Class than Christians, Jews were treated differently from the rest of Great Britain, As the war ended though they flourished. PTSD was a big part of WW1, in the beginning they called it ¨shell shock¨ which they thought physically damaged the soldiers when the bombs were dropped. My book, The Invisible Wall is historically accurate being in which my evidence to support that Bernstein was correct in the categories of social class social tensions and PTSD. Arriving at the idea that This book is trustable and