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Holocaust Journals
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Life is Beautiful
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The Pianist
The Pianist was a very good, heart warming movie. Of course throughout the course of the movie it wasn't very heartfelt but towards the end when one of the Nazi soldiers helps the jewish musician survive while they were clearing out the ghetto, it gave hope that not all the Nazi's were evil. This movie was about how the pianist struggles to survive while the warsaw ghetto was being destructed. He has to find food and even gets sick. A couple decides to let him in and stay with them, but as the ghetto gets destroyed, the place where he was staying gets bombed because it was right outside of the ghetto. Luckily he escapes and finds himself to be back in the ghetto hiding in a house. Struggling for food he finally finds a jar of food. As he goes to open it it falls and he turns not to pick up the jar but to see a Nazi standing right in front of him. The Nazi asks him what he does and he tells him that he is a pianist. The Nazi makes him play the piano for him and then keeps him in his hiding spot and tells the other soldiers that the house is clear so they don't go in and find him. Every day the Nazi solider would bring him food and tell him to hang in there because he would be able to go free soon. He asked him his name so that when he was freed he could listen out for his music on the radio. Eventually the Russian soldiers come to save the jews and everyone comes out of hiding. He finds his family and the concentration camps are liberated. The end of this movie is very heart warming seeing the Nazi help out the pianist and then him being freed and finding his family at the end.
Lola: Holocaust Survivor
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The Butterfly by Pavel Friedmann
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Oprah and Elie at Auschwitz
Seeing Elie Wiesel go back to the concentration camp to where he was taken as a child was really amazing. Trying to imagine the thoughts that were going through his head during it was almost impossible. The fact that he literally showed us where he last saw his mother and sister, and where they were probably burned was unbelievable, in an upsetting way. I found it pretty amazing that he was willing to go back there. You would think that after all that he witnessed at that camp, he wouldn't want to go back. He was probably having horrible flashbacks. When they entered the museum I am pretty sure everyone in the classroom's mouth dropped at the amount of shoes and baggage there was. It really touched us all when we saw all the babies shoes. It was beyond upsetting that the Nazi's had killed so many children. When they saw all the shoes, not only babies, Oprah says, "…behind every shoe is life, is a person." This shows the significance of each shoe and how they represented someone who did not make it out of the Holocaust. Another significant quote said by Elie was, "How many Nobel Prize winners died at the age of one…two?" This quote is significant because it shows how the children that died in the holocaust never got a chance. Who knows what these kids were capable of, but it didn't matter because they were just automatically killed, without being given a chance to show the world what they were capable of becoming.
Night: Elie Wiesel
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