Sunday, March 22, 2009

Holocaust Paragraph

When people think of what happened during the Holocaust, their minds usually turn to concentration and death camps. Although the camps do play a huge role in the outcome of the Holocaust, it was not the only hardship that the Jewish people had to face. First, Hitler began taking privileges away from the Jewish community. The History Place Holocaust Timeline states that by 1938, most Jewish rights were long gone. At that point, Jews were already being deported to concentration and death camps. These people were taken (sometimes violently) from their homes, and forced to board a freight train. With days of travel, no food, and no room to even sit down on the train, several people died before the train arrived at the camp. Perhaps they were they lucky ones, for the ones who dismounted the train had no idea what terrors were to follow. Louis Bulow says that after getting off the train, germans examined each Jew. Some were told they would be getting and led to large buildings. The ‘showers’ that the prisoners were led to were in fact, large gas chambers. After undressing and given a piece of soap, the giant doors were shut, and the gas was released. Within twenty minutes everyone inside the chamber was dead. Those who had been fortunate enough to avoid the gas chambers were immediately put to work, most of them perished. According to 'Deadly Medicine: Creating the Master Race' website, the Nazis at the camps conducted awful medical experiments on the prisoners. This is shown in the novel 'Night' by Elizer Wiesel, Elie undergoes an operation without anesthesics "They had not put me to sleep" (Wiesel, 75). They viewed the Jewish as people who could just be disposed. One experiment that the Nazis did was they put people in the freezing cold, to first, establish how long it would take to lower the body temperature to death and second, how to best resuscitate the frozen victim. Over 6 million people died, and several were very near-death when the Americans finally came to release the prisoners from the death camps.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Holocaust Research Flow-Map


Holocaust Research

I was given the task of finding some things that happened during the Holocaust. After being in a play about the Holocaust, visiting Holocaust museums, and learning about it in school, I know that there had to be hundreds. I believe that the Holocaust truley began when Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany in 1933. The terror for Jewish people followed quickly. TheIt started with people destroying Jewish stores. Although it must have been terrible, no one had any idea of what was to come. That is when the Jewish community started to loose their priveledges. First, they were not allowed to own land, then they could not have health insurance, then went their right to serve in the military, finally, Hitler took pretty much all of their rights away when he wrote the Nuremberg laws. They were a number of laws that prohibited Jews from doing pretty much anything. As if that wasn't enough the Nazis demanded that any Jewish people had to register wealth and property, Jews over age 15 had to apply for identity cards from the police, which any policeman could ask for, at any time, for no reason whatsoever. THen they had all Jewish women add "Sarah" and Jewish men to add "Israel" to their names on their passports, the Nazis then forced them to wear a red J. Imagine being a Jew at this time, you could'nt work, because they had been banned from almost all kinds of work, the children were not allowed to go to school. You were forced to be relocated to Jewish houses, could not own radios, or be outside from 8 p.m. to 9 a.m. That was just the beginning. Soon, Jews began dissapearing, never to be seen again. They had been deported to concentration camps along with gypsies, black people, homosexuals and mentally disabled people, where they faced horrors beyond our imagination. After a long ride on freight trains, where there was no room to move, they arrived at the camps. There, they were either killed instantly, by being told they were getting showers, and then being put into gas chambers instead. Or forced to work until they were dead. Not only that, but I learned that the Nazis conducted several expiriments on their captives that were held in death camps like: Auchswitz, Dachau, Buchenwald and Natzweiler. The tests that the nazis conducted were inhumane and awful. They put people in the freezing cold,to find out first, to establish how long it would take to lower the body temperature to death and second how to best resuscitate the frozen victim. These people did awful, unspeakable tests on twins. I'll spare you the details, but know this, they were gruesome. Over 6 million people died, and several were very near-death when the Americans finally came to release the prisoners from the death camps. Beleive it or not, those things listed above were only a portion of what happened during the Holocaust. It was an unbelievable thing that happened, and we will never forget it.

Sources:

http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/deadlymedicine/

http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/holocaust/timeline.html

http://www.deathcamps.info/FAQ.htm

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

8. Culture

I just got back from a great trip to New York that I took with some thespians from school. We went to four shows in three days. All of which were phenomonal. One of the shows that we saw was called "Billy Elliot". Billy Elliot is the story of a young boy who developes an amazing talent for dancing.In my opinion, it was the best musical we saw. For many people, culture means only things like religion and heritage. But according to my mom, culture can be what is important or who you are to anyone in particular. It can be heritage, food, family, music, traditions, pretty much anything. For Billy Elliot it was dancing. Dancing becomes apart of him. At one point, Billy sings a song about how dancing makes him feel. It is called "Electricity". The song talks about how dancing makes it feel and how it completes him. Dancing is Billy's culture, what is yours?

7.Change


Yesterday, I was babysitting a little girl, and for her bedtime story, I read her Peter Pan. Most know the story, so I won't tell it. However, there was one thing that really stuck with me. That second star to the right, Neverland, where nobody ever grows up. Sometimes I think it would be the best if I never had to grow, but the truth is, growing up is part of living. Change can be extremely hard, but it needs to happen at some point in our lives. Without change, new opportunities would be non-existant. In the book, Peter asks Wendy if she could stay in Neverland forever. She says no. I think that, as tempting as it was to have the chance to never grow up, she made the right choice. Wendy knew that things could not stay exactly the same forever. They would have to change.

6. Hope

I recently read a poem about hope that really stood out to me. Here it is:

What hope means
Hope is bright shining light which keeps darkness at the bay
Hope is gentle cold breeze on a hot summer day
Hope is to remain positive when going gets tough
Hope is seeking more when others think you had enough
What hope means
Hope is dreaming of tommorow
Hope is simmering under sorrow
Hope is sparkles when tears in our eyes
Hope is a beautiful thing & beutiful things never dies
What hope means
Hope is as light as a feather
Hope keeps all of us together
Hope is ubiquitous and free of cost
Hope is the last thing ever lost.....

-Vineet Bansal

My family and I are currently going through some struggles and hope is something that we can hold on to, no matter what happens. In my opinion, hope is everything, one cannot live without it. This poem shows how that is true. Hope is free of cost, and it is the last thing ever lost. As our class read "Nectar In A Sieve", we all know how important hope is. Despite everything lost, Rukmani does not give up, she still has hope. In my opinion, without hope, everyone would just give up at the slightest hint of trouble. Suicide would probably be alot more common if there was no hope. Think about how hope affects your everyday life. With problems about homework, social life, family and everything else, everyone is bound to lose some heart. So then what drives one to keep going? Hope. Hope to get good grades and to get into college. Hope to be happy and have friends. Hope for everything. In the end, hope IS everything and without it, all would be lost.

5. Religion


A few years ago, when I was in Colorado with my church, we went to this camp. There was another church there from Atlanta, Georgia. As it was a sunny, summer day, I decided to wear my beloved Harry Potter hat (after reading the books about 15 times each, I am a bit of a nut). Everyone was divided up into groups and told about an activity that they had to do. As soon as we started, the adult (from the other church) in our group turned top me and demanded that I remove my hat. Instinctivly, I asked why. I was extremely suprised by the answer. " Because witchcraft is the work of the DEVIL!!". I stared at him in disbelief, but took my hat off all the same. I was fine with him having his own opinions, but he should not have brought me into it. I would completly understand if I had been wearing something offensive, but really! Harry Potter? It was his belief that Harry Potter was the work of the devil, and I am certain there are thousands more people who believe the same thing. Thankfully, we all have different religions and beliefs. Religion makes us each unique and helps people cope with what goes on. But I think that one's religion should not keep someone else from wearing something that they like from a book.

4. Gender Roles

I babysit this little four year old girl, she loves Disney princesses, as alomost all four year old girls do. Anyway, whenever I babysit, I bring over something of my own to share. This time I brought over the Disney classic, "Sleeping Beauty". You all know the story with Princess Aurora who touches the spinning wheel and falls into a deep sleep. As I was sitting there, watching, I thought about how so many movies and books follow the same story line. Girl falls in love with guy, girl gets into mortal danger, guy saves her, they live happily ever after. Some might say that the reason that all these Disney movies have the same theme, is because they were made a long time ago, when women were viewed as weaker than men. But the truth is, movies and books today still have that theme. What will it take to have the women saving the men? I realize that there is the occasional flick that shows the girl saving the guy, but really, there is a definite need for more. I think that, subconsiously, people are getting the wrong idea about women, and that they need to be saved. Women are strong! And they can do anything men can!