promo levi& holocaust
Primo Levi born in Turin, a Jew was trained as a chemist. Because of the persecution of Italian Jews, he joined the partisans, with whom he fought until his capture in 1944. He was sent to the Buna-Monowitz concentration camp, where his background in chemistry helped him survive until his camp was liberated by the Russians in January 1945.".He was most famous for his accounts of the death camps." Primo Levi committed suicide in his native Turin in April 1987. Death camps and labor camps were part of a larger scheme created by the Nazis, which Hitler controlled. The nation of Germany blindly followed Hitler into World War 2. Under his command Aryan race was supposed to prevail over every other, a so-called "perfect" race, which Hitler undoubtfully believed. He decided that everyone else who lived in Germany like Jews, gypsies, non-supporters of Nazism, and mentally ill individuals were to be eliminated from the German population. "He proceeded to reach his goal in a systematic scheme. "One of his main methods of "doing away" with these "undesirables" was through the use of concentration camps." That's how he came up with a plan called "the final solution". Auschwitz one of seven concentration camps throughout Europe carried out
Those who perished in this tragic time succumbed to the unmerciful blaze of hatred. Jews were not the only victims of Hitler's regime, but they were the only group that Nazis sought to destroy entirely. In the words of one survivor'' one thing is clear what happened exceeds our boldest horrors and ended with an answer to our greatest prayers''. (Values p.59). Jewish prayers were answered when the liberators extinguished the flames of malice. Even so, Jews were left with a will to tell and testify to the Holocaust. History, however, must never forget. The ashes have cooled and remains buried in mass graves. The ovens that housed the inferno are silent and are visited today by new generations who learn the story of the Holocaust from the dead. The flames and fire that raged across Easter Europe have died. ''We must never forget'' are the words that every Jew must remember. By not forgetting, we are preventing another Holocaust from occurring. We are also letting the entire world know and remember the millions of loved ones lost in the horrible event that we call the Holocaust. Tragically, though, the prejudice that fueled the Holocaust still exists in the heart of man. The dimensions of atrocities at that time surpass anything the human imagination could ever possibly conceive. Nevertheless poems were written to somehow try and tell us never to forget this event called Holocaust. "Torn feet and cursed earth, the long line in the gray morning.'' Levi expresses his grief how Jewish people living peacefully among others were forced to flied their homes just to be put into camps, awaiting separation from their families and imminent death that surly followed for many. ''The Buna smokes from a thousand chimneys, a day like every other day awaits us.'' Black smoke daily covered the blue sky. '' At full capacity the crematories could b
Some common words found in the essay are:
Jews Nazi's, Primo Levi, Holocaust Torn, Holocaust People, Germany Jews, Jews German, Eli Weisel, World War, Easter Europe, Holocaust History, primo levi, death camps, world war 2, strong man'', medical experiments, brought jews, forced labor, world war, concentration camps, roll call, war 2,
Approximate Word count = 1241
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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