Terezin Concentration Camp Poem Summary

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More than 12,000 children below the age of 15 proceeded through the Terezin Concentration Camp, known by its German name of Theresienstadt, between the years 1942 and 1944. Out of all, more than 90 percent deceased during the Holocaust. To add on, Jewish children wrote poetry about their horrific experiences they went through in Nazi concentration camps. Additionally, the poet’s word choice produces the narrator’s point of view. For example, in the poem The Butterfly, it states, “It went away I'm sure because it wished to kiss the world goodbye” (stanza 2). In other words, Pavel Friedmann, poet, uses first-person point of view, so the narrator can be the main person in the poem by saying things from his/her perspective. From this, we can infer that the poet’s word choice in a way puts the narrator into their feet, in order for him/her to have a feeling as if they’re the one confronting this harsh obstacle in life like the poet had to challenge with. …show more content…

Basically, the poet uses the word choices of “me” and “I’d” for it to elaborate a first-person viewpoint. I interpret this to mean the unknown poets’ option of words helps the narrator express their feeling of hopefulness in one day being able to see their home and nature. In addition, it helps us the listeners to hear the narrator’s desire of getting out of the concentration camp, due to their poor circumstances. Surprisingly, it makes one consider as if this was the narrator’s poem from their past, instead of the actual poet. For instance, in the piece of poetry Fear, it says, “We want to work – we must not die!” (stanza 4). To me, Eva Picková (poet) generates the narrator’s perspective, since she utilizes the word “we” with regard to it being read by first

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