Viktor Frankl told us first that he came to the camp as an official prisoner of the Auschwitz concentration camp. He learned more about the fear of camping and how it greatly affected your way of thinking. He can show his reader the psychological view of the surrounding environment and the surrounding atmosphere using the story of concentration camps he participated in. The story of Frankel will answer one of the many outstanding questions Nostra Aetate raised now. The problem is "What is the meaning and purpose of life?" Frankel tried to answer this question about experience in a concentration camp.
In this memoir, a psychiatrist, Viktor Frankl, shared his experiences in the four concentration camps, including the Auschwitz concentration camp, and shared his lesson on spiritual survival. Frankel also found a deep meaning and a desire to survive and hope in the living hell and excited about an unknown and uncertain future. "People living in concentration camps can remember those who came through a cabin to comfort others and give up the last piece of bread.They may be few in number but they are all from men Provide sufficient evidence to prove that it will be taken: the last human freedom - choose the attitude of a person in a particular situation and choose the way people do it "
The memoir of psychiatrist Viktor Frankl has captivated readers over generations to explain the lessons of life and spiritual survival of Nazi's death camp. Between 1942 and 1945, Frankel worked in four different camps, including Auschwitz concentration camps, but his parents, brothers, and pregnant wife died. Based on his own experience and the experience of other people he actually treated, Frankel believes that we can not avoid suffering, but we deal with it, find meaning and set new goals You can choose how to proceed. Frankel's theory, known as contrast therapy, comes from the Greek logo ("meaning") - as Freud insists, the main motivation in our life is not happy, It is to discover and pursue what it feels meaningful to things