The Holocaust
The Holocaust museum opened March in 1996. The Museum shows the dangers of prejudice, hatred and violence against the backdrop of the holocaust. The exhibits in the museum mainly focused on the lives of millions of Jews and other innocent victims. The museum helps you to get a clear understanding on the education as well as the general population about the uniqueness of the event and its lesson. My friend Christina and I visited the holocaust museum October 4th. The first part of our tour began with a short film called The Voices. The film was showing the verbal testimony from all the holocaust survivors. This film was really touching, because each survivor would never want to experience a tragedy like the holocaust. After the film our tour began with a look at life before the holocaust. Christina and I saw the beginnings of Nazism and Adolf Hitler's rise to power. All the displays in the museum showed progress through the disruption of normal life, to segregation, to imprisonment in the concentration camps, and then finally to extermination. The rescuers and deliberators were shown to us in the artifacts, photos and in the text panels. The holocaust is a widespread of human disaster. Its original meaning is the destruction of
When World War II began around September in 1939, the German army occupied the western half of Poland and added almost 2 million Jews to the German. Usually, the old people and sick ones died while traveling in the trains. The victims of Auschwitz came from all over Europe in Norway, France, Italy, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Yugoslavia, and Greece. Sobibor's gas chambers were 250,000 dead and Treblinka's for 700,000 to 800,000. The food and coal were to be shipped in and manufactured products sent out. The trains had freight cars, they moved slowly on special schedules to their destinations. Several people were able to find refuge in the other countries, but many were too old and poor so they stayed behind. 4 million in shooting operation and 600,000 in ghettos. Auschwitz camp used hydrogen cyanide for the gassings. Auschwitz was the largest death camp. Around November in 1938 all the Jewish synagogues in Germany were set on fire, windows of Jewish shops were smashed, and thousands of Jews were arrested. There was about 1000 people loaded on the trains. In the Warsaw ghetto, the rations gave barely 1200 calories to each inhabitant. The Jewish dead numbered more than 5 million, about 3 million in killing centers and the camps. The establishment of Israel three years after Germany's defeat was an after effect of the holocaust.
Common topics in this essay:
Jews Germany,
,
Jews Germany's,
Auschwitz Kulmhof,
Adolf Hitler's,
Jehovah's Witnesses,
Jews Gypsies,
Jewish November,
Jews Jewish,
Auschwitz Jewish,
death camps,
world war ii,
war ii,
millions jews,
jews germany,
jewish dead,
holocaust museum,
half jews,
world war,
gas chambers,
|