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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(5 pp) When the Holocaust began, Alicia Jurman was
a young Jewish girl growing up in the southeastern
Polish city of Buczacz. In that city, about a third
of the population was Jewish. Even though there was
anti-Semitism in Poland, as there was anti-Semitism
nearly everywhere in Europe, Alicia with her parents
and four brothers led relatively peaceful lives.
This all changed with Germany's invasion of Poland..
the infamous blitzkrieg of September 1, 1939 -
Alicia was only 9 years old at the time. Alicia tells
her amazing and powerful tale of holocaust
survival from the eyes of a young girl with the
wisdom of an adult. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBalicia.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
and four brothers led relatively peaceful lives. This all changed with Germanys invasion of Poland...the infamous blitzkrieg of September 1, 1939 - Alicia was only 9 years old at the
time. Alicia tells her amazing and powerful tale of holocaust survival from the eyes of a young girl with the wisdom of an adult. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
BBalicia.rtf ALICIA APPLEMAN-JURMAN: My Story Written by for the Paperstore, Inc., July 2000 Introduction
When the Holocaust began, Alicia Jurman was a young Jewish girl growing up in the southeastern Polish city of Buczacz. In that city, about a third of the population
was Jewish. Even though there was anti-Semitism in Poland, as there was anti-Semitism nearly everywhere in Europe, Alicia with her parents and four brothers led relatively peaceful lives. This all
changed with Germanys invasion of Poland...the infamous blitzkrieg of September 1, 1939 - Alicia was only 9 years old at the time. Alicia tells her amazing and powerful tale of
holocaust survival from the eyes of a young girl with the wisdom of an adult. The Times The Germans worked out a deal with Stalin and they divided Poland between
themselves. Buczacz fell under Russian occupation. A few weeks after the Soviet/German treaty was signed, the Russian army entered Alicias city and occupied it. The Russian communist regime brought down
all religious icons, including those of Christianity (Polish residents were Roman Catholic and Ukrainian residents were Greek Orthodox) and the pictures of Lenin and Stalin replaced them. The communists began
removing so-called "Enemies of the Soviet Union" from the area in their effort to "Russianize" this new territory. Others they offered to "e-educate" within Mother Russia. According to Viterbo College
...