Museum of Tolerance
As I explored the Museum of Tolerance, I was surprised to find what is an environment of high tech media "in your face" interactive screens that educates visitors with human rights issues all over the world. The Museum explores areas such as the exploitation of women and children, threat of terrorism and engages visitors to finding solutions to the problems of human rights violations.I became a witness to the events of World War II while I was toured around room to room as if we were reliving the decade's events in Germany from pre-World War II, through the rise and fall of the Third Reich, and liberation. I received photo passport card of a young boy whose life was changed by the events of the Holocaust. Throughout the tour, my passport is updated and at the end, the ultimate fate of the child is revealed. I felt Death.The Museum of Tolerance also showed an unforgettable timeline of all the victims of the Holocaust as well to all the patrons. From Hitler's rise to power, which was the initiation of a period that produced great fear to millions, to the destruction of almost an entire civilization. Millions were forced to live in ghettos, only to be deported later to the concentration camps to be inhumanely slaug
For many, the resistance was a struggle for physical existence. Those who attempted to rescue Jews and others from the Nazi death sentence did so at great risk to their own safety. In Denmark, 7,220 of its 8,000 Jews were saved by a citizenry who hid them, then ferried them to the safety of neutral Sweden. Even today, unresolved issues about the Holocaust remain. 5 to 2 million displaced persons (DPs) did not want to return to their homes, fearing economic and social repercussions, or even annihilation. Britain and France had no choice but to declare war on Germany. The Allies set up DP camps in Germany, which American, British, and French military controlled, and the United Nations took care of. This type of movement in the world geographic sense, would be symbolic to the claiming of territories, people, or land by a government or higher regime that many humans have made in past geographical history. Gradually, a more diverse group was imprisoned, including Jews, Jehovah's Witnesses, Gypsies, dissenting clergy, homosexuals, as well as others who were denounced for making critical remarks about the Nazis. It is also surprising that this gang would become the legal government of Germany by 1933. THE JEWISH CAMPS (1942-1942):Camps were an essential part of the Nazis' systematic oppression and mass murder of Jews, political adversaries, and others considered socially and racially undesirable. Domestically, during the next six years, Hitler completely transformed Germany into a police state. These complex issues have occupied the hearts and minds of thousands around the world for decades. RESCUE & LIBERATION (1944-1945):Throughout the Holocaust, victims received help from rescuers.
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