The Holocausst
By: Steve • Essay • 325 Words • December 27, 2009 • 672 Views
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?We are the children of the holocaust. We are both Germans and Jews. We are the children of the victims. We are the children of the oppressors. We started out on opposite sides but the memory of the holocaust will join us forever. We shall never let the victims be forgotten, for if we do, we will forget that the perpetrator can be in all of us.? This poem expresses quite well the sensation that most individuals feel when they hear the word ?Holocaust.? Although they may not have been there, or known someone who was, they may still feel an underlying sadness or anger due to the events that took place during World War II. I myself am neither a Jew nor have German decent, and I too become emotional at just the thought of such a devastating occurrence. It is in this sense that I will discuss how the Holocaust has affected not only the Jewish world, but other peoples as well.
In 1933, the Nazi party began their reign in Germany, under the malevolent dictator Adolf Hitler; his role as ?prime minister? of the county lead to the temporary suspension of civil rights for communists and Jews. The first concentration camp, known as