Heroes in the 1900’s
“The righteous among the Nations are defined as those few who risked their lives to help Jews.” One may feel much gratitude toward all of the people who risked their lives because not many people would but someones elses life before theirs. To be a hero means to help somebody without expecting anything in return. Examples of heroes are Irena Sendler, Gino Bartali, and Albert Goering even though he didn’t get acknowledged for what he did. An example of a hero is Gino Bartali. Gino Bartali was born in Florence in 1914, he started his work as a mechanic in a bicycle shop. He was a villager from a poor Tuscan family. Bartali quit his job as a mechanic and became a Courier. A Courier is a messenger who transports goods or documents. Bartali was asked by the Cardinal of florence to join a secret network offering protection and safe passage to jews and other endangered people. Bartali soon was arrested a questioned about what had happened. He was risking his and his family”s life.
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Irena was a 29-year-old social worker, she used her job to Jews. Irena went to the ghetto to help dying Jews. Irena smuggled them and took them to the Aryan side and helped set up a hiding place for them. Irena used an old courthouse on the edge of the Warsaw Ghetto as one of the main routes of smuggling children out, but when the Warsaw Ghetto was erected in 1940 she could no longer help isolate Jews. Irena had five main means of escape; Using an ambulance so that a child could be taken out and hidden under a stretcher, escape through the courthouse, a child could be taken out using the sewer pipes or other secret underground passages, a trolley could carry out children hiding in a sack, truck, a suitcase, or something similar; if a child could pretend to be sick or was actually very ill, they could be legally removed using the ambulance. I got this information from www.Yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/
The Germans were deporting 5 to 10 thousand Jews a day at the Umschlagplatz. Were the Jews would be tightly packed in cattle cars and shipped off to death camps like treblinka were they would be sent to labor or the gas chambers were you executed. Death camps would try to hide what’s really going on. The death camps would say turn in all your valuables so you can be delouced but what they really are doing is sending you to your death.People that are war profiteers would sell some of the valuables that were collected at the death camps. So Irena was terrified when they started deportation she was afraid that all the kids that she put in the orphanage in the ghetto. Several days after wards there was tremence fire fights that broke out all over the ghetto. So Irena sprung into action thinking that the Germans would be distracted from all the fighting so that Irena can smuggle more Jewish kids into the Aryan side. Irena looked at danger straight in the face and smuggled kids through the sewer. Once the Nazi got wind of people smuggling Jews through the sewer they started putting posing the sewers so in anybody went down there they would die. That day Irena smuggled almost 200 kids throughout these
Heroes have been around for centuries. From Joan of Arc who help win France's 100 year war to Oskar Schindler, who saved over 1000 Jews from the Holocaust and countless
Irena got a pass from Warsaw’s Epidemic Control Department, which allowed her to legally visit the Ghetto daily. Then, between 1942-1943, she snuck children out of the Warsaw Ghetto to safe hiding places, and found non-Jewish families to adopt them. The youth only knew Irena by her code name “Jolanta”. She had to persuade many parents to part from their children, which was a very difficult and dreadful task. Irena later recalls, “In my dreams, I still hear the cries when they left their parents.”
Children were separated from their parents. Once their parents were safe she believed that they should be reunited with them. Irena wrote down every kids name and where they were staying. “Sendler wrote down all relevant information in a special code on used cigarette papers she collected,” ( “Irena Sendler,” [World Biography] 2). Using code allowed her to know where they were but no one else could get that information. But just writing in code wasn’t safe enough. “These lists of names were then put in jars and buried in the yard of a friend’s house at 9 Ledarska Street in Warsaw,” (“Irena sendler,” [World Biography] 3). The list was safe from the Naxis hands because she buried it. She kept this list in order to reunite them with there parents but unfortunately were died. “ Most of the Ghetto families had died at the Treblinka death camp,”(“Irena Sendler,” [World Biography] 3). Despite her best efforts she wasn’t successful at reuniting them. Irena wanted the children to have there parents and took steps to make that happen, but most of their parents died during the world. The effort she made was notable because after saving them she could be done but she still wanted to help
Hiding from the Nazis gave the children extra survival time, as they were not exposed to the Nazis and taken to the camps where they would be killed. True historical facts of the war reflect the realism in movie, as this is exactly what Irena did. Irena found Polish Catholic families who were willing to take in the Jewish children she was saving and treat them as if they were their own. The children were given new identities that they had to memorize in case anyone were to ask any questions; along with this they also had to learn Catholic prayers and be able to do the sign of the cross as if they were doing it all of their life. Although Irena herself is not an actual person there were many people like herself in real life during the war who would take in Jewish children, saving them from the Germans.
Irena Sendler was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1910. Her father was a great influence in her life who was a doctor and became one of the first Polish Socialists. When WWII started Irena was twenty nine years old and a social worker employed by the Welfare Department of the Warsaw municipality (Yad Vashem). In 1942 the Nazis placed hundreds of thousands of Jews into a 16-block area which became known as the Warsaw Ghetto. This ghetto became infested with disease and the social workers were not allowed inside. Irena, at a great personal danger, showed her moral
Bartali which was a devoted Catholic partnered with local priests and many Italians who’d created an effective operation to provide Jewish families with identity papers so they could avoid deportation to the death camps.
Irena exhibits this through the book as she faces countless challenges during the Holocaust. She follows her morals and saves over 2,500 children from dying parents inside the Warsaw Ghetto, which ends up with her being thrown into Pawiak prison and beaten severely. Irena still stuck true to her morals, telling the Gestapo that she had nothing to do with ZEGOTA and was a simple social worker. Nearing the end, she stayed alive by telling herself, “there is nothing more they can do to hurt me. I am already dead”. Eventually, she was sentenced to death, but escaped. Though World War 2 ended soon after, she was forgotten and shamed by Communist Poland. However, she didn’t care about fame or money. She faced many hardships in her path, and some may think it isn’t worth it to follow this route. However, she touched the lives of others and created a better world for numerous people, which made everything worth it in the end. Her only regret was not doing more. Not figuring out how to escape Pawiak sooner, not being able to save her mother, not rescuing more kids. Irena kept pushing herself to an impossible limit, and achieved
The Jewish kids that the Nazis had or were taking where being hurt and murdered by Hitler and his men which were the Nazis. Irena saw that when she worked for them so she started doing secret jobs for the Jewish people. Most of the people see her as a hero but she thinks what she did was normal for a person like her because she was a nurse. Her journey as a Germen nurse was hard and maybe scary because of what she was seeing and how she couldn’t help them because they weren’t allowed to. (‘Sendler,
Heroes are those who have gone above what the average person would do to ensure the welfare of others. Natural disasters, terrorism, poverty, and war are some of the many things that destroy and end people’s lives. Throughout history, many people have made a difference. However, as history progresses, what we consider to be socially normal changes along with our definition of a hero. In Ancient Greece, Theseus, Hercules, and Perseus were considered heroes, but today only Theseus and Perseus would be considered heroes because Hercules would be shunned by society.
Zimbardo demonstrates that trait of pure selflessness in the face of danger: "Irena Sendler was a Polish hero, a Catholic woman who saved at least 2,500 Jewish kids who were holed up in the Warsaw ghetto that the Nazis had erected.". Irena Sendler, if caught, faced torture, death, and slave labor for both her and her family. Despite the consequences, she still risked everything for those 2,500 kids. Equally important, heroes don't have to be in as extreme straits as Irena was during the holocaust: "Our communities are full of everyday heroes. These are the nurses, schoolteachers, addiction counselors, community organizers, social workers, coaches, probation officers, and other civilians who struggle to keep Americans from slipping toward despair, sickness, or violence."
Geographically, the Wild West refers to the vast, newly settled, and lawless territories of the United States in the old, battling days. Chronically, the Western Frontier is the period of westward expansion in American 19th century history. However, the legendary stories of the Old West signify more than basic words on a history page, and the nature of the Wild West symbolizes more than simple images on a flat map. The immortal myth has ingrained in people 's mind the vision of the eccentric Western heroes and the cultured cowboys from generations to generations. More than entertaining anecdotes, the nonconformist Wild West heroes and cowboys ignite the soul of America. American imagination has allowed the myth mingle with the reality to create heroic stories, yet it is no exaggeration to say that the myth of the Western Frontier is an influential piece of American puzzle.
Any individual can be a hero if he or she is willing to make sacrifices and act selfless to help others. A hero is brave, determined and confident. Their actions influence people around them to adopt these noble qualities. Many acts and accomplishments the Irena Sendler has done demonstrates the many traits of an incredible and true hero.
Another idea of a hero was when Gandhi had stood up for his country; India. “Gandhi led nationwide campaigns to ease poverty, expand women's rights, and build religious and ethnic amity” plus he had “spent a number of years in jail in both South Africa and India”. In other words Gandhi never gave up showing everyone how India should be independent. Gandhi had stood out his way by leading marches to declare independence. Gandhi had been admired for his bravery (when he was thrown in jail a few times), his confidence (he never showed any sign of weakness) and perseverance (he had never gave up).
Irena became a hero. She smuggled children out five different ways. One was using an ambulance, a child could be taken out hidden under the stretcher. Another way is escape would be