Primo Levi Survival In Auschwitz

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In life, inevitably there are plenty of trials and tribulations that arise and present challenges for people, with some being out of one’s control. They vary in significance and by how much stress they induce, but they play a crucial role in the growth of a person. For example, living in a concentration camp during the Holocaust was a terrible and unfortunate experience for Jews and other minorities. Nevertheless, there were still many survivors that were able to endure the extreme conditions and then share their remarkable stories of struggle and perseverance, like survivors Primo Levi, an Italian Jew who lived in Auschwitz, and Samuel Willenburg, a Polish Jew who lived in Treblinka. Levi and Willenburg relied on certain characteristics in …show more content…

Levi describes this term in his autobiography “Survival in Auschwitz”, specifically in the chapter “The Drowned and the Saved”, in several ways, distinguishing this kind of victim among the rest. Levi states there are two types of the people in the camp, the drowned and the saved, in which the drowned are the muselmann. In regards to the ‘saved’ individuals, Levi depicts them “adaptable, the strong and astute individuals, even the leaders willing keep contact…even friendly contact, because they hope later to perhaps derive some benefit” (Levi 89). Here, this group is known to be ones clinging on to hope, in the desire for something good to occur in the near future. However, the muselmann are the opposite of these kind of …show more content…

In one case, he states “The frequent cases of suicide among the prisoners helped camouflage the executions. Almost every one of us had a dose of cyanide or some other poison on hand [for ourselves] in case of trouble. Many people in the camp committed suicide by hanging themselves…” (Willenberg 196). This depicts the tragic aspect of life in the concentration camps, in which victims reached a breaking point and commit suicide (or keep something handy in case the time comes). This relates to the idea of the muselmann that Levi presented in his story, where one was able to accept death at any given moment and not fight

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