The Holocaust: Genocide of Jews During World War II

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The Holocaust, what is the true depth of the word? As sad as it may seem, it had the most damaging effects on the human mind in history. Many horrific events consisting of genocide of Jews during World War II came to play during the Holocaust. Accounts of life during the genocide of the Jewish culture emerged among of which are Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Letters to George C. Marshall, Mein Kampf and The Jewish Peril books by Nazi leader Adolf Hitler. Moreover, the victims of the Holocaust were deeply affected by the trauma they encountered by such atrocity and brutality as described by its survivors.
Individuals cannot seem to get enough of what some people went through, yet actually happened in History, and is revealed first hand by Elie Wiesel. These desperate words were running through Wiesel’s head in reaction to the concentration camps, “I pinched myself: was I still alive? Was I awake? How was it possible that men, women, and children were being burned and that the world kept silent? No. All this could not be real” (Wiesel 32). He survived the Holocaust of World War II although it was not easy through several conflicts he encountered. Wiesel focuses on the different aspects of the existence during the atrocity in his corresponding works Night. For instance, many atrocities were committed in and around the city; most of them were against the civilians. Germans saw a lot of innocent Jews being humiliated and sent off to die in the concentration camps during World War II. However, they did nothing due to the deep hatred they had for the Jews. This just proves the atrocities being committed and some of these violent acts included burning, shooting, and decapitation. In his memoir, Night, Wiesel e...

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...ividuals propaganda must be aimed at the so-called intellect emotions and once he achieved his goal, there was no stopping him. Moreover, the atrocities that Hitler unleashed on the population were due to propaganda.
As human beings we are often faced with challenges, threats, and many difficult choices. The importance of these issues is how we come to our final decision and how we decide to face all of the treats that we encounter in our daily lives. Elie Wiesels’s memoir Night, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Letters to George C. Marshall and Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf and The Jewish Peril writings all show the effects and difficulties the Jewish people faced in various ways. Whether experiencing someone die right in front of you or seeing another individual trying to stay alive, all the Holocaust victims were affected by atrocity and brutality in tremendous ways.

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