Bang is a realistic, fictional story told from the perspective of a runaway Jewish man, Abel who is originally from Berlin, Germany. Abel is on a mission to escape from Berlin to Switzerland, a country deemed neutral from any opposing side in war. Abel travels Poland through vast run in’s with Nazi’s and several trips, hitch hiking on unaware vehicles. Abel arrives in Poland through a Nazi ship pretending to be a ss soldier only to be discovered. He makes it to a dark alleyway alive where he trades clothes and stays for several weeks. One day he walks out into the open and discovers a man, a boy and a young girl something is interesting about them, he follows. What happens next is yours to find out… The past holds many …show more content…
The man had wrinkles and dirty face which made him appear much older than he probably is but then again appearance wasn’t a top priority. Next to the man was a young boy and a little girl, something about them intrigues me, before I knew it I followed after them. Left, right, right, right, left and down the alleyway, they stop at a barn? They walk inside and appear to be heading down to a cellar, it looks safe, secure and would be a good hiding spot. “Thump! Thump! Thump!” the Nazi’s march in unison as they make their way into the cellar, they take the man and several children outside. The Nazi soldier remains silent and raises his hand towards the little girl from earlier so naive and innocent before I realise I’m running towards the Nazi clenching my fists. I hear someone shout “Stop! you evil scum!” I fear for the poor dimwit who said that. I realise that I said that, I’m the dimwit, It was not long until I was tackled to the floor. The Nazi officer swings at my head with his gun, wielding it as if it was a sword. One giant blow after another, darkness is all I see, pain is all I feel. I wake up to find six sets of eyes staring at me, the little girl from before smiles at
There is a part where we watch as humans are so ugly that it is hard for us to imagine that what they had done is possible. Liesel is playing soccer in the park and all of a sudden all the kids stop because of a noise they hear coming down the street. They think it could be a herd of cattle, but that not what it is. It is a group of Jewish people being led, or forced, to the death camps by German soldiers. On there way we watch a man die “He was dead. The man was dead. Just give him five minutes and he would surely fall into the German gutter and die. They would all let him, and they would all watch”(Zusak 393). This is talking about how when a Jewish person would die, the Germans wouldn’t do anything. They wouldn’t care that a man died right in front of them. While the Jews are walking Hans, Liesel adopted father, gives them bread. While Hans is giving this man bread a German soldier notices what is going on. He walks over to the man and, “The Jew was whipped six times. On his back, his heart, and
In the annals of history, the Holocaust registers as one of mankind’s most “unspeakable” offenses. And yet, over the past seventy years, survivors have strived nonetheless to transform torture into language—to verbalize the violence against man’s body and spirit that occurred at the hands of the Nazis.
Names are taken from the Jews and replaced with numbers when they enter the camp. This act is an attempt to steal the Jews’ identities; however, they fight against this act of dehumanization. The Nazi’s hoped to kill them mentally by doing this. My arm burns. I look up into the blue eyes of a Nazi guard as he burns the number into my skin. I smell burning flesh and want to barf. All around me irons are being heated up. “You
“I stood petrified. What had happened to me? My father had just been struck, in front of mem and I had not even blinked. I had watched and kept silent. Only yesterday, I would have dug my nails into this criminal’s flesh. Had I changed that much? So fast?”(Wiesel 39).
The light hurt Wolfgang’s eyes as he open his eyes and looked up into the sky.His eyes strained because he remembers everything, the beating and his experience at Auschwitz.
During the Holocaust, the Nazis did not stop at simply asserting their own superiority over the Jews; they stripped them of their sense of self and individuality and reduced them to the numbers they had tattooed on their arms. The theme of inhumanity is common in every story and every memory recounted in the memoir. Night makes you question the power of humanity. It makes you wonder how ordinary human beings could bring themselves to commit the kind of horror that we now deem unthinkable. But then again, people say that the most human thing of all is cruelty. And every family destroyed, every instance of torture and every life lost is
We’re just now arriving in Auschwitz-Birkenau. My name is Herr Spiegel, and i’m a 24 year old bartender from Wurzburg, Germany. I’m unfathomably terrified, i don't know what awaits me here, but i’m scared it isn’t anything short of pleasant. Ash is raining from the sky, and thousands of men, women, and children are being sent to work mercilessly.
In the concentration camps, Jews have witnessed and experience violence towards them. One way Wiesel’s life became challenging is by the loss of his innocence from witnessing his father being stuck in the face. In Auschwitz at a concentration camp, Wiesel's father asks the Gypsy a simple question that results in him getting slapped painfully, in “ My father had just been struck in front of me, and I had not even blinked” (Wiesel, 39). As Wiesel’s father is being slapped in front of him, Wiesel becomes frozen in fear. He begins to understand that violence is real in the world. Wiesel has never witnessed anything that has ever made him fear for his life. He says this in “ I had not even blinked”, where he petrify in fear. As his father is getting slapped, Wiesel is silently
The people scared to look behind them, in fear of what they may see, did exactly what the Nazi demanded. The poor mothers and children dressed in shorts and skirts almost frozen to death, just a jacket wasn’t enough to keep you warm in this weather. The soldiers just
“Never shall I forget the nocturnal silence that deprived me for all eternity of the desire to live,” from the thoughts of Eli Wiesel after his first night at camp (Wiesel 34). The Holocaust, lasting over ten years, not only did it seize the lives of millions, it disfigured the souls of corpses who survived. Gratefully some of these outlasts shared their stories to protect society’s future. In Night, Eli Wiesel uses foreshadowing, imagery and figurative language to illustrate the brutality aspect of humanity.
The two brothers want to fight the Nazis like their father is doing in Africa but they’re obviously underage. The two brothers are home alone the majority of the time since their mom works at the munitions factory, this leads them to spend hours exploring the outdoors. Whilst they're playing make-believe war, the young boys step foot on a military base. They are confronted by soldiers who seem very secretive, the Braun siblings think that the military base is actually occupied by Nazis. This piqued their curiosity even more so they try to gain more intel, they start talking to Jack’s boss, the journalist and WWI ex-German soldier. After gaining more information about the Camp they decide to sneak into it. When they are laying on the floor they get caught by a soldier. The brothers are brought in the camp and they have to sign a contract to never disclose any information about Camp X. The boys meet to very important figures in the war, Big Bill and Little
During the duration of World War II, the Jewish people of Europe were subjected to such inhumane actions at the hands of the Nazi party. Ellie Wiesel, in his memoir Night, describe this demoralizing treatment in great detail. As the reader delves deeper into Wiesel’s experiences, the dehumanization of the Jewish people becomes greater and greater. First, they were stripped of their possessions, then their names, and finally their dignity, and though the Nazi tried to finally stripped them of their humanity, they were unsuccessful.
“Sort through the clothing; valuables in one pile, rags in another. Keep anything for yourselves and I’ll kill you myself” the Nazi barked. Although I wouldn’t call my job enjoyable, I was able to avoid the wrath of the Nazi’s, for I couldn’t mess too much up, if I got cold, I could dig my arms into the piles of clothes, but my favorite part was working with Josef, my work companion. One day, Josef found a piece of bread in a coat pocket, and he quickly ate it, but not quick enough, for a Nazi soldier shoved his foot on the small of his back, pushing him to the ground. “Did you not know how to listen?” the Nazi shouted “I said I’d kill you myself, and that’s exactly what I’ll do” A shot rattled through the air, but his words rattled me. “I said I’ll kill you. I said I’ll kill you. I said I’ll kill
In the midst of a normal day in Nazi Germany, an innocent shop owner was forced to his knees - with his hands behind his back. A massive, looming crowd of passersby encircled the scene; time yielded as no one looked away nor ran in to help. Wrists shackled and face bruised, the shop owner pleaded the officers for mercy, but his actions were in vain. However, they showed one spectator a new path that he must choose - the path of justice. Stepping forward, he defended the convicted man, not with violence, but with words. “STOP!” he shouted. “He is a good man. We all...” He was cut short as a brutal uppercut from one of the officers sent the late middle-aged man flying.
“Nazi SS bastards!” mumbles the LT under his breath but loud enough for the second in command to hear him.