Levi, primo. Survival of Auschwitz concentration camps, Nazi attacks against humanity. First edition New York: Simon and Schuster, 1996. The survival of the Auschwitz concentration camp is a unique autobiographical explanation that how young men are tolerant of the atrocities of the Nazi death camps and tell of how they live. In December 1943 Primo Levi, a 24-year-old Jewish chemist from Turin, Italy, was captured by fascist militia and forcibly repatriated to the Buna-Monowitz camp in the Auschwitz concentration camp. The train journey took four days in a packed box without food and water.
Auschwitz concentration camp Primorevi's surviving writer Primorevi has read the novel "survival" of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Throughout the novel, he escaped the fate of all the inhabitants who were said to have been in the Auschwitz concentration camp again and again. - Anxiety, suspense, hesitation, and death, these all evolve around survival and humans can see their true abilities beyond the limits. Survival is a mixture of physical, psychological, and emotional tasks. There are many stories that can challenge human abilities, but there are two stories about survival.
Autobiography "Survival of the Auschwitz concentration camp" was written by a member of the Italian resistance movement called Primorevi. In the novel, Levi explained his imprisonment at the concentration camp in Auschwitz from February 1944 to January 27, 1945. Levi was born in Torino, Italy in July 1919. After 67 years, he died in the same city of Turin, Italy. He is a smart and smart person who is passionate about writing and chemistry. - Primo Levi explains the atrocities in concentration camps in his novel "Oswego's Camp" (2008), which was condemned by the prisoners of Schwarzwald. Levi explained "to reject humanity" and constantly forces prisoners to pass metaphors, metaphor, an inhumane image of animals and machines ("inhumanization").