Love and hate are said to be strong feelings. While this is true, there is still a lot of hate and love in this world. In class, we’ve read two stories set in the 1940’s during the Holocaust. In the articles I’ve read, there are many examples of love and hate. The disheartening thing is, there is more founded examples of hate than there is of love. The hate in the articles is mainly discrimination. In the story, The Ball, two boys are playing and end up breaking a window. The shopkeeper started ranting and yelling things like, “Thieves! Burglars!”, “This good-for-nothing Jewboy (...)!”, “Hitler will show you yet!” This proves that she is prejudiced against Jews and hates them. After explaining to the police what happened, the policeman replied,
The Holocaust was a bloodbath that was instigated by jealousy and lies. In 1921, 7 years after WWI the germans had just taken the tool in losing the war. They were the low class bottom feeders. While the Germans were fighting the Jews in Germans seized the opportunity to take control. The Jews worked themselves and eventually found themselves sitting comfortably at the top of the order in Germany. When the Germans came home they realized that they were now longer the superior. Adolf Hitler saw this and took advantage of the Germans vulnerability .He said a speech that resembles to that of one that was given 826 years before. He told the Nazi’s that they would once again be in power, and that they once again would be the ones who were respected.
The Holocaust which was one of many of the controversial events that have happened in the history of our world demonstrated a significant amount of cruelty and dehumanization. Because of such a controversial event, many have suffered through physical and unfortunately psychological upheaval and distress. With previous knowledge and novels’ read on the Holocaust, it came to be known that the event was triggered through obedience and conformity due to the not specifically the Germans’ beliefs of anti-Semitic and propaganda, but more of leader Adolf Hitler. The time of the Holocaust was used to dehumanize which enhanced the understanding of mental health and human psychology. During the Holocaust, many psychological principles affected individuals forever. The principles include groupthink and of course knowing the outcome of the event. Such principles sooner explain the reality of life because it stresses how individuals react due to their past experiences like the Holocaust and most importantly how traumatic events build them as who they are today. Innocent Jews went through starvation, terrible working conditions, and the elimination of race through torture such as gas chambers. Furthermore, the history of this controversial event is now being used to be alert of the health and wellness of those who have gone through such events that sooner change their behavior and mentality for the better or even worse.
The Holocaust was the systematic killing and extermination of millions of Jews and other Europeans by the German Nazi state between 1939 and 1945. Innocent Europeans were forced from their homes into concentration camps, executed violently, and used for medical experiments. The Nazis believed their acts against this innocent society were justified when hate was the motivating factor. The Holocaust illustrates the consequences of prejudice, racism, and stereotyping on a society. It forces societies to examine the responsibility and role of citizenship, in addition to approaching the powerful ramifications of indifference and inaction. (Holden Congressional Record). Despite the adverse treatment of the Jews, there are lessons that can be learned from the Holocaust: The Nazi’s rise to power could have been prevented, the act of genocide was influenced by hate, and the remembrance of the Holocaust is of the utmost importance for humanity.
Racism is the belief centralized in the idea that a certain race is considered to be superior or inferior to another. It is a belief that labels a person’s worth, social, and moral traits based on his/her inherent nationality or biological features (Anti-Defamation League). This mentality has been around for centuries and still exists today. There are several theories about how such came about and why it continues to thrive. Racism can only be thoroughly studied by tracing its roots and history. Knowing the relevant events prior to and after the peak of a racist manifestation in the society during a certain period of time is one of the keys in understanding the nature of racism. It is important to note that the attempt to understand the nature of racism is not necessarily equivalent to the attempt to justify it. The main purpose of racism studies should be directed towards the attempt to lessen, if not eradicate such mentality. The Holocaust, the infamous racist manifestation which took place in Germany is a great example of what happens when racism is not stopped or prevented. Taking such infamous racist events in history under an extensive look, reveals some of the major arguments/concepts/causes of racism that could lead to understanding racism as a whole and thereby help address this issue in the modern-day society. Extreme ethnocentrism, rivalry for supremacy, and people lacking information are some of the causes of racism deemed to be important in studying
If one hates someone or something that means they have an intense dislike towards them. Sometimes this hate can be so large it can be an influence for mass destruction. We have learned, or even have seen examples of hate turning into something bigger throughout our history. These examples include the multiple wars, terrorist’s attacks, and genocides. Many of these incidents were drove by hate, and did not end well. What drives this hate? How can people turn on one another with just feeling hate towards them? The Holocaust being one of the many genocides in our history was indeed influenced by an intense dislike. That intense dislike was towards certain types of people it ended up taking multiple lives.
In 1933, the Jewish population of Europe was about 9.5 million people. The number represented more than 60 percent of the world's Jewish population at that time, estimated at 15.3 million. So how could two out of every three European Jews be dead by the end of World War 2? The answer to this question lies in the hands of Adolph Hitler. Adolph Hitler has helped destroy the lives of millions of families around the world, but how was he able to take part in these mass killing of Jews all around Europe.
From 1933 through 1945 was a period of history called the Holocaust. During the Holocaust, people were being killed for their looks, race, and disability. About 11 million people were killed in brutal and tragic ways. Adolf Hitler, the leader, wanted to create a pure race. Racism helped Hitler organize the population into the way he wanted. He wanted people to support the cause of making a pure race. If people opposed, they would be persecuted. Racism allowed Hitler to influence the German people into following his leadership even if it meant genocide.
Jews have been hated for a long time ever since the holocaust. The holocaust had a big impact on many people especially jews. The holocaust created so many issues that everyone didn’t like. The people who were involved in the holocaust went through very traumatic experiences. Jews just were hated. They were hated before the holocaust too. What people are affected by anti semitism? Anti semitism hurts a lot of other people beside jews. According to Merriam Webster Dictionary, anti semitism is hostility or discrimination against jews as a religious or ethnic group. There are two kinds of anti semitism, classical anti semitism and modern anti semitism. Classical anti semitism is hatred and intolerance towards jews. Modern anti semitism was
Throughout history, the Jewish people have been continuously at the center of numerous persecution and hatred. In countries all over Europe the Jewish people countless acts of hate have occurred for centuries. During the time of the Holocaust, over twelve million people were exterminated and it is believed anywhere from five and a half million to six and a half million of these people were Jewish. The Jewish people were repeadelty targeted for a number of various reasons.
Imagine yourself as a seven year old child, playing hide and seek in the neighborhood streets with your mischievous friends and enjoying life without a care in your mind. Where you go to school with a smile on your face excited about what the day has to bring, messing around and cracking jokes with your friends at lunch time, and later on getting picked up by your nurturing parents to go home and do homework and have some family time with your parents and siblings and finally going to bed in your warm and comfortable bed. Now imagine if all those wonderful things just disappeared and the world around you changes in one instant and turns into a fiery pit of hell, where evil men roam those streets you found refuge. All you hear is an unending sound of screaming, crying, and gunshots as mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters are forever separated not knowing where they are going. Anti-Semitism is the hatred of Jews, and it reached its pinnacle during the Holocaust. It’s known world wide as the genocide of approximately six million European Jews. Strikingly, there is a decent number of people in the world who don 't entirely believe that the Holocaust happened as it is documented by witnesses, survivors, and those tasked with rescuing those who survived, and burying those who did not. These people are known as Holocaust Revisionists; or in another term, “deniers.”
When I think of America I picture the land of the free, sanctuary for all those being hurt and oppressed, but this wasn’t always the case and just like the majority of the world during the 1930-1940’s they shunned the Jewish population. Why had a country who had been built on the principles of freedom allowed so much time to pass by silently waiting while the Jewish population was being slaughtered all over Europe. What could be the reason for doing nothing for so long, could it have been the fact that they were completely unaware of what exactly was going on in Europe during this time or did they just not care enough to do anything about it. After the war finished many German People claimed that they didn’t know what exactly was happening during this time to the Jews so if this was happening over there and they were in the dark about it as well who could possibly blame America who was thousands of miles away to know.
The Holocaust is consider one of the biggest hate crime that the world has witness. It is a hate crime due to the fact that is directed toward a specific group of people. Individual chosen or group chosen because they represent a group believed to represent a group that the perpetrator is biased against. Everything started when Adolf Hitler became the leader of Germany, form 1934 to 1945. Adolf Hitler was born in Austria in 1889. Hitler rose to power in German politics becoming the leader of the National Socialist German Workers Part; known as the Nazi Party. As the dictator of Germany from 1933 to 1945 he started WWII with the invention to Poland. Hitler was the orchestrated of the Holocaust, which resulted in the death of 6 million Jews. Hitler believes that Jews were an inferior race. According to Hitler Jews were an alien threat to German racial purity and community. “After years of Nazi rule in Germany, during which Jews were consistently persecuted, Hitler’s “final solution”–now known as the Holocaust–came to fruition under the cover of world war, with mass killing centers constructed in the concentration camps of occupied Poland “ (History 2009). Hitler’s symbol used to murder millions of people was the swastika. The word "swastika" comes from the Sanskrit svastika - "su" meaning "good," "asti" meaning "to be," and "ka" as a suffix. Until the Nazis used this symbol, the swastika was used by many cultures throughout the past 3,000 years to represent life, sun, power,
Jews or Jewish people come from the religion of Judaism. Jews are considered “children of Israel”. Jews only believe in one God who they refer to as HaShem. In the late 30’s Jews were treated Horribly. To Germans Jews were considered as nothing, they were stripped of their german citizenship, couldn’t ride their bikes , weren’t allowed to go to the movies , They weren’t allowed to marry germans and they had to wear a yellow star of david to identify that they were jews.
A known author and holocaust survivor named Ellie Wiesel once quoted “The opposite of love is not hatred, but indifference.” This message reflects on the relationship many holocaust survivors have with their children and other descendants of the later generation. Connecting people born in different generations is very tough as lifestyles constantly change. To add a significant life experience to the first generation is even more difficult. The woman I interviewed named Nichole Carrie, 31 years of age reveals her relationship with her grandmother; a child holocaust survivor. She reveals the lack of connection she has with her grandmother, and the unique experiences she and her mother witnessed as the descendants of a holocaust survivor. Nichole Carrie’s experiences is a proof that the holocaust does not only affect the holocaust survivor itself, but also the later generations. The holocaust trauma predicts the decisions the survivors make. These decisions result in circumstances, patterns and types of engagements that all impact and shape the later generations. This proves that the Holocaust; the past is still shaping the modern society.
Humankind has been tremendously defined by love and hate. Through our highest highs and our lowest lows, our emotions are the strongest feelings that are brought to life. Love and hate are two of the greatest sensational feelings an individual can experience in their lives. In an article about emotions, it states, “Love requires compassion. Hate requires only ego. We are born with ego, but we must learn compassion.” (Campagna) There are countless amounts of our population who would agree that these two emotions drive each and every action we do causing our societies spontaneous calculated behavior. Love and hate hold no rules, boundaries or defenders when it comes to how an individual feels them. These ritualistic tendencies can even be