In this picture, my eye first captures all the snow and the soldiers with guns. The USHMM caption is, ¨Several SS officers stand with their shotguns during a winter hunting excursion.” There are a lot of SS officers with guns. It looks like they are having a little discussion about something. If I knew these were SS officers, I would normally think they would be forcing the Jews to do hard labor or evacuate the freezing cold winter. Because of what I know about the Holocaust, I was surprised when I read they were just hunting instead of killing the Jews who were too exhausted to run on any longer. |
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The way Wiesel writes his memoir is almost like it’s written in prose, he is extremely descriptive with his writing, and his sentences flow, but he keeps the plot fast-paced and moving like the greatest poems are. There was one part I read that almost brought me to tears: the uncertainty of it, the questions it left, and the horrifying thought that it was pure hope that was keeping these people alive when there truly was nothing to hope for. “Take care of your son. He is very weak, very dehydrated. Take care of yourselves, you must avoid selections. Eat! Anything. Anytime. Eat all you can. The weak don’t last very long around here”… And he himself was so thin, so withered, so weak… “The only thing that keeps me alive,” he kept saying, “is to know that Reizel and the little ones are still alive. Were it not for them, I would give up.” One evening, he came to see us, his face radiant. “A transport just arrived from Antwerp. I shall go to see them tomorrow. Surely they will hav...
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