Analysis Of A Lucky Child By Thomas Buergenthal

1157 Words3 Pages

A Lucky Child by Thomas Buergenthal is a memoir about his time as a Jewish child in multiple ghettos and death camps in and around Germany during World War II. The author shares about his reunions with family and acquaintances from the war in the years between then and now. Buergenthal wished to share his Holocaust story for a number of reasons: to prevent himself from just being another number, to contribute to history, to show the power and necessity of forgiveness, the will to not give up, and to question how people change in war allowing them to do unspeakable things. The memoir is not a cry for private attention, but a call to break the cycle of hatred and violence to end mass crimes. Thomas Buergenthal believes he was literally “a lucky …show more content…

They resorted solely to numbers dehumanizing their victims and making them as livestock. Thomas Buergenthal was known as B-2930. The unique identity his given name provided was removed. However, Thomas didn’t let that keep him from fighting. He did not assault anyone to defend himself. He practiced “moral resistance.” He felt as long as he stayed alive he was defeating the Nazi’s. He once told himself, “if I give up, they will have won.” He knew not to give them the satisfaction of seeing fear in his eyes, something he learned from his father. Through his book one can learn the thoughts of a Holocaust survivor, which allows for better understanding of this time through greater information about the struggles and losses of a Holocaust …show more content…

He told of being on a balcony, seeing people pass by, and wanting to have a machine gun to release his anger. His hatred for the Germans and what they had done to him and his family was very evident. On a personal level Thomas Buergenthal learned to forgive, because it benefited him more than staying bitter. He sums this up when talking about himself and his mother by saying, “ I doubt that we would have been able to preserve our sanity had we remained consumed by hatred for the rest of our lives.” The process of forgiving took a lot of time. He eventually realized “that one cannot hope to protect mankind from crimes such as those that were visited upon us unless one struggles to break the cycle of hatred and violence that invariably leads to more suffering by innocent human beings.” This realization lead Buergenthal to go to law school and work in multiple human rights organizations and courts. He felt fit to serve in such a place as he was a victim of the greatest infringement on human rights in

Open Document