Holocaust Survivors
[2024-02-01 09:36:32]
Atrocities of the Holocaust killed six million Jews, but about 5 million survived. After the war, there were people released from concentration camps, those who cooperated with resistance and guerrillas, people hidden by the Gentiles of justice, or people who fled the Nazis before the final solution began. After the war, most of these survivors left Eastern Europe and traveled to other countries. Many people emigrated to Israel, America, Canada, and Australia
Today, we work together and record the survivors' memory and testimony for future generations. The biggest recommended bank was found in the USC Shore Foundation founded by Steven Spielberg in 1994 after making the movie "Schindler". Originally named as a survivor of the Shore Visual History Foundation, in 2006 became part of the University of Southern California. Many lawsuits raised in the International Court of Justice bring compensation and benefits to survivors who have deprived property and citizenship during the war. . There are also many organizations striving to ensure that survivors have access to food, access to health care, and secure housing. Despite these efforts, it is estimated that half of the world survivors of the Holocaust live in poverty.
Listen to, talk and read stories about people who survived the war, interviewed by primary school students and historians, and those who survived in the liberation camp.
Since 1981, Dr. Sidney Bolkosky, a professor of history at the University of Michigan Dearborn, interviewed survivors of the Holocaust. Listen to the file he gathered
Established by Steven Spielberg, the laboratory contains video testimonies of nearly 52,000 Holocaust survivors and other witnesses in 32 languages from 56 countries.
According to a recent nationwide Jewish population survey, one in four American slaughter people live below the poverty line, not 7% previously thought. A similar study on survivors in the New York area showed that half of the people live below the poverty line.
The Jewish argument said that about half of the 517,000 survivors still alive are living in poverty and are struggling to make a living.
But it is not just the Jew, but the only survivor of the Holocaust. For example, the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington defines survivors of the Holocaust as "those who were expelled for Jews for Jews or non-Jews." Racial, religious, ethnic, social and political policies of the Nazis and their collaborators from 1933 to 1945. In addition to former prisoners of concentration camps, slums and prisons, this definition also includes hiding refugees and people. A registry containing over 196,000 records related to survivors and their families. However, there is a possibility that the estimated number of survivors of the Holocaust right after the end of the war is wrong. Especially because there is no one who makes their main duties the number of survivors who are in death camps.
After the concentration camps were released in 1945, survivors of the Holocaust began their latest trip - seeking new lives, families, and families. They often suppress the trauma they took during the Holocaust, push them behind their heart and keep them away from the sorrow of fear and accepting new lives. They do their best to "go ahead", but for many people this healthy covering eventually paves the way for various emotional and psychological difficulties. They can not lament and acknowledge the pain, they show various symptoms. Over time, psychiatrists classified these symptoms as 'survivor syndrome', 'concentration camp syndrome' and 'posttraumatic stress disorder' and began to identify and study. The trauma of the Holocaust seems to have not ended at the time of release.
There are many references on posttraumatic stress syndrome (PTSD) and causes of symptoms. Post traumatic stress disorder has been studied by veterans, Holocaust survivors, rape victims and other trauma victims. In addition to survivors of the Holocaust,