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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. The Jews have been, perhaps, one of the most persecuted of all peoples throughout history. Their pursuits to survive as both a people and a religion have been paved with pits and valleys from the time they began the struggle to reclaim what has been lost to political and social strife. In spite of the fact that the Jews were mercilessly persecuted at the hands of the Germans, they have fought hard to survive as a collective people; a significant component of that fight came from the courageous Holocaust rescue efforts. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCrescu.doc
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religion have been paved with pits and valleys from the time they began the struggle to reclaim what has been lost to political and social strife. In spite of
the fact that the Jews were mercilessly persecuted at the hands of the Germans, they have fought hard to survive as a collective people; a significant component of that fight
came from the courageous Holocaust rescue efforts. In her book Anne Frank Remembered, Miep Gies, who helped hide Anne Frank and her family,
tells of the emotions evident when it looked like these horrors would finally end. Anne Frank is by far the most famous Holocaust victim of the one point five
million children who lost their lives in German concentration camps; their ultimate sacrifice is symbolized by "a ghostly chamber flickering with lights" (Anonymous 24A). By accounts of the diary
she kept during the brutality of German rule, Frank offered the world an emotional glimpse into the world of a child who tried desperately to piece together reasons for all
the chaos and bloodshed. Together with her own family and four others, Frank attempted to outwit the Germans and save their lives by going into hiding. At first,
she took delight in the scheme, thinking it would be an exciting way to avert capture but as the twenty-five months dragged on; her enthusiasm waned more and more.
Gies, who may be one of the most memorable of all Holocaust rescuers, remembers that it was September 3 in 1944 when the BBC
announced that the British had entered the south of Holland. The unrestrained joy and optimism that swept through Amsterdam was palpable. It was on September 5, a day
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