Tuesday, April 30, 2013


just showing what the Jews were forced to go through

Friday, April 26, 2013

A Choice To Take You're Life or Have It Be Taken



“I wished I had a suicide pill or something, because I knew if they tortured me, I’d probably break down and tell them everything.” - Halina. Page 30 of Escaping Into the Night


When I read this quote, what runs through my mind is WHY the Jews? They didn't do anything wrong, and it’s impossible to deserve something like this, when they did nothing wrong.  I’m not saying that it would've been alright to take away some other type of religion or races rights, I just want to know like why did they kill just the Jews and made them feel worthless. This shows that Hitler’s Nazi soldiers and everyone else that worked for him, did brutal stuff to the Jews. Because who would rather choose to die over than to just be tortured?  
I think that mostly everyone at the Holocaust felt the exact same way as Halina. But with Halina, she’d rather just want to take a pill just so she can die right there and then. Instead of having the Nazis’ torturing her and killing her. That's pretty bad. It’s a shame knowing that Hitler treated them like they were just unworthy to live.

Those Choice-less Choices.

“But I couldn’t hesitate. I just had to do it. I aimed the gun through the window, straight at the center of his back, then pulled the trigger”- Halina, pg. 141 and 142, Escaping into the Night I thought this quote was beautifully written, it is short but powerful and meaningful. It reflects on her options; it’s her choiceless choice. She really has no choice, either let Batya die, or all escape safely and shoot a Nazi in the process, so she really had no choice. I think that was the best choice for their situation, and I think about how hard it must’ve been for Halina and Rueven to shoot an officer, because I’m sure 13 year olds don’t want to take anyones life away! I’m sure many people had to go through this as well while in the Holocaust, even in the Holocaust museum there was a woman talking about in an interview, that she had to shoot an officer in her own building so the children she was sheltering would be safe. I would never want to be in that situation, especially at this age, but whatever it takes for you to survive and to help your loved ones survive. A real life connection I have to make would have to be relating this to the homeless, and people living in the streets or in poverty. It’s kind of a weird connection, because most homeless people don’t go out and shoot officers, but they share a strong connection of doing anything to survive. They beg for food, money, and help, and do what they have to do to make it through to another day. They both struggle to find food and its hard to have good hygiene, or maintain being healthy. So they compare a lot to each other, especially with shooting the officer, expressing the will to survive. Annie

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Anti-Semitism


Reflect on one of the readings you've received since starting the Holocaust unit. In other words, share your thoughts and feelings and explain your thinking by citing a particular passage or quote from the text.
“While millions were murdered outright through the use of gas chambers and other methods of extermination, hundreds of thousands of others died from disease, starvation, and slave labor.”  
What stood out to me the most was how the quote said “millions were murdered” and then later another “hundreds of thousands” died by another way, instead of being put into the gas chambers. Like how is it possible for the Nazi soldiers to wake up every morning and decide to kill hundreds of people and torture them ?
In the reading of “Antisemitism: A History of Fate”, I learned what the word Anti-Semitism meant, and I don’t think its right at all. I don’t think that people should be judged based on what they believe in. I can’t even imagine soldiers killing people for fun and it all being legal. Hitler treated them like they were nothing, and like they were unworthy to live. It’s nonsense. Jews did not deserve to live that way, nor die the way they did during the Holocaust.

Friday, April 19, 2013

Good over bad

In her diary, Anne Frank wrote that she believed “most people are good.” Do you agree with Anne? If so, why, and if not, why not? (Echoes and Reflections) I do agree with Anne, most people are good. In a time of terror, or even just like this week the Boston Marathon bombing, even though there are people who caused the terror, there were more people helping out. The good over takes the bad in this world, that’s how I think of things, instead of the negative, always think of the positive outcomes in tragedies. Especially in the Holocaust, although we lost 11 million people, we gained knowledge, stories, and survivors. Countries and people gained strength from the bad experiences. They give us strength by expressing the message that it does get better. We’ve seen the survival stories, how they got through the struggle, and it gives us strength to realize that we can too. So yes, there are bad people out there, but Anne Frank had a point - most people are truly good, which can prove to have the biggest impact on our world.

The power that's given




How did the Holocaust happen? (Stansbury Essential Question)

In my opinion I think the Holocaust was mostly appeasement that encouraged the Nazi Party’s genocide of the Jews .The Holocaust happened because there weren't enough people prevailing against Hitler’s movement on the Jews. Too many countries let him do whatever he pleased. The Holocaust has been and can be claimed one of the worst Genocides in history, and it’s all because of bystanders, as long as they watched the Jews be prosecuted for being a race (which is incorrect because it’s a religion) the more power it gave Hitler. I feel as if the Holocaust is a sick lesson saying - don’t do what's easy - do what’s right.