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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page report discusses the feelings and attitudes survivors of the Holocaust have relating to God and to death in relationship to the nightmare they experienced during World War II. Interviews, poetry, and memoirs of survivors are used throughout the paper. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Holosurv.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
many, if not most, there is no language to share the dark and difficult years of the past. In fact, most of the survivors who are still alive in 1998
have found that silence is their only voice of expression (Schindler Spiegel Malachi 243). When a world has become too consumed by the present and is primarily occupied by a
beloved generation of children and their children as well, there is little room to hear or understand the horrific tribulations that were endured by so many only an ephemeral forty
years earlier. How is it possible to assert oneself to tell a story, that even in the process of living it, was quite to horrible to share with anybody
who had not been there as well. In later life, when most of their contemporaries have died, the need to share the
experiences of the Holocaust with others becomes increasingly urgent. With an event such as years in one of the "death camps," witnessing ones most beloved people murdered in front
of them, and the systematic degradation of all living beings associated with Judaism, quite simply became more than even the most mentally health or stalwart could ever be expected to
bear. For example, most of those survivors interviewed by Schindler, Spiegel, and Malachi (1992) expressed their almost desperate need to "bear witness." Not surprisnigly, helping elderly people to share
the experiences is no easy task. Helping professions such as mental health professionals, social workers, grief counselors, hospice workers, and others have found that to engage the elderly with
reminiscences, memory, bereavement, and the working through of guilt provide unusually difficult challenges. For the most part, two distinct and very different
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