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This 6 page paper discusses some of the reasons for the Holocaust as well as the surprising Jewish indifference to it. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVJewInd.rtf
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regime. There were in fact many more people killed by the Holocaust is usually thought of specifically in reference to the Jews, and we will use it in that sense
here. The question that is often asked, and the question that we will attempt to answer in this paper, is what were the reasons for the Holocaust and even more
puzzling, why did the Jews remain indifferent to what was happening for so long. Discussion In his book Night, Elie Wiesel writes of his horrific experiences in the concentration camps
at Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Wiesel uses Eliezer as his narrator, and Eliezer tells of his friend Moshe the Beadle, who is taken to Poland by the Nazis (Night (book), 2006).
Moshe somehow survives the journey and escapes, returning to the village to war the other Jews of what is coming (Night (book), 2006). He describes how the train he was
on was turned over to the Gestapo, and the Jews on board were "transferred to lorries and driven to the forest in Galicia, near Kolomaye, where they were forced to
dig pits. When they had finished, each prisoner had to approach the hole, present his neck, and was shot" (Night (book), 2006). He describes babies used for target practice, and
people taking days to die of their wounds, but no one in the village believes him; their reaction is: "Hes just trying to make us pity him. What an imagination
he has! they said. Or even: Poor fellow. Hes gone mad. And as for Moshe, he wept" (Night (book), 2006). Even as conditions grew worse and restrictions increased, the
Jews continued to deny that they were in danger (Night (book), 2006). They were under curfew, they couldnt go to restaurants or the synagogue, and they had to wear the
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