Warsaw Ghetto Essay

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    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

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    process was known as Ghettoization. The Jews who were sent to the Ghettos were struggling to survive the harsh conditions that they had to face while they were there; such as hunger, sickness, squalor, and despair. Additionally, upon arrival at the ghettos, the Jews were required to give all their valuables to the Nazis. The most gargantuan ghetto organized by the Nazis was the Warsaw Ghetto, in Poland. Overcrowding of people in ghettos made it all that more suffering because it would mean less food

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    death? Nothing. In Treblinka, there was absence. And then, when I blocked out the sound of the bird calls and focused on the howling of the wind, it wasn’t peaceful anymore. The absence became the screams of 840,000. Stone Story 1 (Czestochowa Ghetto): The SS shove eighty to a hundred people into each wagon, the old, the sick, the pregnant, nursing women and before long hose who had gone mad from the journey. There was barely space to stand, let along sit down however most desperately pushed to

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    the time of the holocaust, many people died from starvation, diseases, and some were slaughtered; almost all of the ghettos went through that. What did they do to try and fight to survive? How did they make money? And what are some things the ghettos lacked? These are questions I had. The articles “United States Holocaust Memorial Museum”, “Daily Life In the Warsaw Ghetto” and “Ghettos Under the Nazis” have all of the answers. Out of necessities, money was absolutely needed. There were many different

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    the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. The Warsaw ghetto was established on October 12, 1940 ("The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising"). It was sealed off from the rest of the city and prisoners compared it to living in a prison. In November 1941, the Nazis made a law that any Jews caught outside the ghetto, would be sentenced to death. They outlawed radios, phones, etc. That way Jews wouldn't be able to communicate the outside world ("The American Experience.America And The Holocaust.People & Events | The Warsaw Ghetto

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    In Surviving the Applewhites the main idea is, that with determination anything is possible. This is shown in how the Applewhites, dedicated themselves to the production of The Sound of Music, even when it was being canceled they didn’t give up and put on the play in their own residence. The Von Trapps relate to the theme because of how determined Captain Trapp was to stay true to himself and not give into the Nazi’s request. Despite the Von Trapps knowing that as soon as they finished their performance

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    and ghettos, confined into areas no bigger than 1 square mile.

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    called the Jewish Fighting Organization. The group was otherwise known as the ZOB. The Jewish Fighting Organization aimed to gain control of the Warsaw Ghetto because they could no longer stand by and watch their family and friends be deported to concentration camps. In the summer of 1942 the seeds for the ZOB were planted, the liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto had begun and the people there felt that they had to make an effort to protect themselves. From

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    Award winning novelist, Holocaust survivor, human rights activist, Elie Wiesel in his influential speech, ‘ The Perils of Indifference,” emphasizes that indifference is a tempting yet inhumane quality that affects the success our new centuries to come. He develops this message by looking back upon the horrific memories of his Holocaust experience as well as looking back upon the countless assassinations, and wars that have created this “ dark shadow over humanity.” The memories of being “liberated”

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    and I bet they don’t even work. I live in the ghetto and the Nazi’s aren’t very friendly but my mother and father talk in secret with other jewish men and women underground. My sister Adina says that they are apart of the 100 ghettos tryin to fight back and they have goals. She tells me “they are going to save all of us” but

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