The Investigation is a dramatic documentary of the Frankfurt War Crimes trials during the 1960s based on actual evidence from the trial. Weiss strips the trial down to its most essential features and converts it into a powerful play. It consists of extracted testimonies from numerous witnesses and defendants, including moments of examinations and cross-examinations conducted by the prosecutors and defense counsel. The nine unnamed witnesses represent the millions of individuals affected by the Holocaust. They were brought forth to testify to the barbarity of Auschwitz. On the other hand, the 18 defendants were all named and granted permission to defend themselves without fictionalization. While the testimonies of the witnesses felt like an elegy about the horrors they endured, the distasteful rationalizations, disparities, and denials of the defendants created alternative versions of history. Weiss strategically placed the statements of the witnesses, perpetrators, and the judge next to each …show more content…
It is important to note the frequency of the italicized line, "the Defendants laugh" throughout the play. This shows their lack of sympathy towards these survivors. Their actions contradict their claims of innocence and lack of knowledge about the events that occurred within the camp grounds. For example, when defendant 9, a physician who gave deadly injections to prisoners, argued against witness 8's claim that he killed 16,000 prisoners, he made a joke out of the accusation: "That's too much...there were only 16,000 in the entire camp. No one would have been left but the military band" (Weiss 146). This insensitive joke caused the other defendants to laugh. They don't appear to be taking this trial seriously, almost as if they weren't worried about how they were charged with "4,243 counts of murder and 28,910 counts of accessory to murder"
The Holocaust took place from July 30, 1933, to May 8, 1945. The Jews lived those 12 years in torture and suffering, controlled by the atrocious SS guards. They were treated in such an inhumane way and the SS guards were really difficult for them. Elie Wiesel was one of the prisoners in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II and had experienced the Holocaust. He wrote the book “Night” about his Psychological journey that focuses on the dehumanization of the Jews and how the people changed from civilized humans to vicious beings with animal like behavior.
The thematic development of the theme, freedom and confinement was highly predominant in the novel, “Night”, by Elie Wiesel. It was portrayed through the conflict of character vs. character; also, through inner battles like character vs. self. Elie was either trapped mentally or physically, and abused by the people he thought were good in the world. Elie tells us that he was confined in very claustrophobic areas with no way out (physically), that he had all his rights taken away from him and treated like property (physically), and his lost of liberty to think and feel what he wished too; unless thy wanted death to be executed. Hitler and his followers purloined everyone’s freedom and just the simple one that was given to us by some spectacular force, to live in human peace.
Final Draft Known Politician and proud activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali, in her essay, Why they deny the Holocaust, expounds on why people of the Islamic culture deny the Holocaust and are of the opinion that the people of the Jewish religion are con artists by being able to convince the world that the Holocaust happened when it did not. Ali’s purpose is to expose that people are taught to believe that the mass genocide of individuals is a hoax. She adopts a warm tone to relay to the reader that the Islamic people are taught that the Holocaust was a massive lie perpetrated by the Jewish. At the start of her paper, Ali introduces the reader to Why they deny the Holocaust by elaborating on the first time she ever hears of the Holocaust. The reader 's shock is appealed to by her admitting that at the age
Wendy Warren is a professor who works in the field of the history of colonization in the Americas. She speaks in a segment called, Forgotten History: How The New England Colonists Embraced The Slave Trade in the Fresh air podcast called, Warren and Terry Gross, the host, go back and forth answering questions about the information that Warren wrote about. Warren starts the podcast by sharing a passage that man wrote about how a white man raped a black slave women and got her pregnant in order to make more slaves for himself. In the podcast the professor, Wendy Warren, interprets the many speculations against the reality of slaves during this time.
As a historian, analyzing collective responsibility in the Holocaust is defined as; "Every member's responsibility regardless of an individual member's involvement in decisions" would assign responsibility to Poles, and Ukrainians for their involvement, or lack thereof, to the genocide of Jews during the Holocaust. However, the film, “Three Minutes in Poland” by Glenn Kurtz offers an opposing argument that not all Ukrainians can be assigned responsibility collectively for the death of Jews during the Holocaust. The article Neighbors assigns collective responsibility to the Poles living in the town of Jedwabne in Poland. Author Jan Gross offers a vivid account of the “collective decision” by the nationalist Poles. Described as a mob by Gross;
When one thinks of the word hero, an image of a supernatural human being wearing a cape will most likely appear in his or her mind. However, there is more to a hero than how many villains he or she can take down in one day. People often associate values such as courage, selflessness, humility, patience, and caring with heroism, for these values mark the foundation of the honest hero. Throughout history, society has commemorated heroes for their heroic efforts.
About 6 million Jews, 10 million Soviets, 1.8 million non- Jewish Polish citizens, and about 3 million more deaths of other groups died during the Holocaust, as stated by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Over 20 million deaths, all for one war. What factors contributed to this reign of terror and what was or wasn’t done to stop this from happening? How could the United States limit the amount of lives lost? It’s simple.
In his memoir The Last Jew of Treblinka, Chil Rajchman provides the haunting account of his experience at the Nazi extermination camp Treblinka from 1942 to 1943. Written in simple prose with a distinct lack of emotion that focuses exclusively on his time spent imprisoned, Rajchman provides a work that is masterful in its ability to portray the unbelievable brutality of Treblinka. Last Jew was originally written in Yiddish in 1945 with the expressed goal of telling others of what occurred at Treblinka at a time when much of the world was just beginning learn of the horrors that were committed by the Nazis during World War II, it remained unpublished until 2009. In The Last Jew of Treblinka Chil Rajchman provides in the only account of the Treblinka
Night by Elie Wiesel describes how Jews were treated in the concentration camps during World War II. During this time Wiesel witnessed many horrific acts. Two of these were executions. Though the processes of the executions were similar, the condemned and Jews’ reactions to the executions were different.
“The three ‘veteran’ prisoners, needles in hand, tattooed numbers on our left arms. I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name” (Wiesel 42). 1. Wiesel describes to the reader how he is tattooed with an identification number by the “veteran” prisoners the morning after he and his father have arrived at their new camp: Auschwitz. 2.
Lucille Parkinson McCarthy, author of the article, “A Stranger in Strange Lands: A College Student Writing Across the Curriculum”, conducted an experiment that followed one student over a twenty-one month period, through three separate college classes to record his behavioral changes in response to each of the class’s differences in their writing expectations. The purpose was to provide both student and professor a better understanding of the difficulties a student faces while adjusting to the different social and academic settings of each class. McCarthy chose to enter her study without any sort of hypothesis, therefore allowing herself an opportunity to better understand how each writing assignment related to the class specifically and “what
Ever since I was young I have always enjoyed lending a hand to someone, I felt needed support in one way or the other, and this passion of mine helped shape what the future may hold for me on a rainy summer night after my soccer game. It was on a Tuesday night around 11.15pm when my soccer game ended, I ran straight to the men’s washroom because I was dying to use the toilet. Unfortunately for me, I took too long and missed my only ride home; they must have thought I had another ride home. I became bewildered about what to do next then, I thought about giving my mother a call. I reached into my bag for my phone and tried turning it on but, it was unresponsive
The film is amazingly capable of summoning the look and feel of a Germany — well, OK, a West Germany — that is advancing into a financially inexplicable spot where, naturally, numerous individuals would prefer not to cause trouble. On the soundtrack, many German and American pop tunes, are astutely utilized to improve extra period flavor. Labyrinth of Lies is an extremely well-made drama given real truths, it tries underscoring that, not at all like the all the more surely understood Nuremberg trials, the Frankfurt Auschwitz trials included Germans judging Germans, to mend wounds and guarantee equity despite negative feedback of
In the essay "In the Company of Books", Caroline Leavitt grows up in Waltham, Massachusetts with a friend named Ellie. Her friend Ellie is deaf, but throughout her childhood, they would hang out and Ellie would read to her out loud, even so Caroline did not understand a word she was saying. It didn 't matter because she liked her company. When Ellie accordingly needed to move away to a special school in California, the only idea that kept in honor of her is books. It is when she began to learn how to read, at the age 4.
Most of the time whenever someone is asked what a grade is,the answer will probably have to do with educational concept. By a simple letter ,descriptions and conclusions about a student are frequently made. In reality, the concept of a grade is much more complicated. A grade can particularly qualify or rank, any object or person, by its value or intensity. In the poem “Marks” by Linda Pastan ,the author use a controlling metaphor,which dominate the entire poem .By