The surviving people are here to tell the tragic and devastating history of their lives. The survivors shared the cruel and realistic stories of each of the experiences before, during and after the Holocaust. History will never be repeated in the form of racial discrimination, murder, and fear of our leaders. The burning hope of those participants left many people who heard that the fear of the Holocaust is still very sad. People in Europe feel peace and prosperity.
But it is not just the Jew, the Holocaust's only survivor. For example, at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, the survivors of the Holocaust were "exiled for Jews for Jews or non-Jews" from 1933 to 1945 and the racial, Religious, ethnic, social, and political policies. In addition to former prisoners of concentration camps, slums and prisons, this definition also includes hiding refugees and people. There is a registry containing more than 196,000 records related to survivors and their families. However, it is wrong to estimate the number of survivors of the Holocaust, especially immediately after the end of the war. There is no one who thinks the number of survivors of the dead camp as a top priority.
One third of the Jewish population was murdered by the Nazis (Holocaust 1). There are many survivors in the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel is one of the surviving Jews. He is in three different concentration camps, but none are terrible. In Elie Wiesel's novel "Night" Eliezer lost her faith in God during and after concentration camps. That night, Ezekiel is a Jewish boy, I believe in God strongly. He studied the Talmud and spent a lot of time learning things.
After listening to the news from Austria, Germany and other parts of Europe last week, famous Jewish writer and survivor of Holocaust Ellie Wiesel rose from his grave and was stiff and incredible: "You Is joking! Do you have a fool with no memory impairment to see what is going on here? History is repeated!
My personal genocide education includes a visit to the Jewish Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem in Jerusalem and the Jewish Heritage Museum in New York, listening to the opinions of survivors, reading testimony, reading the testimonies, Ellie Wiesel night, and every year Shore It was held in commemoration of. The Holocaust is more important to me than the chapter (or page) of the history textbook. I hope that Jews and non-Jews across the country will be able to share this sentiment.