Ana Acosta
December 1,
2009
English 112B
Holocaust
Literature/Literature from World War II
Take
a moment to think back to a time when you felt cornered, a time when you
thought you were vulnerable and attacked. A time when everyone was out to get
you. You may think that time is now, last week, a few years ago. It may not
have happened yet. But your feelings of vulnerability probably don�t compare to
the feelings of the Jews in concentration camps during World War II and people
who lived during this time period, which lie at the center of this study. Night
by Elie Wiesel is his account of his time in Auschwitz, the concentration camp
in Poland. Through the resources, we will explore the feelings, emotions, and
lives of those who lived through this time or who write about it. This study is
primarily intended for high school students. Because it�s a difficult topic, it
may be an intense task to go through this topic, but its historical value deems
it acceptable to learn and read about what really happened.
I
decided to do my Unit of Study on this topic because of its deep historical
value. Even though it happened many years ago and students are only able to
learn about it through studying and interviews, I think it is important to know
what happened when one person held too much power and how blindly people
followed his lead. In addition, my grandparents were born and lived in Germany
during World War II and have clear memories of what happened when they were
there. I remember reading the book Night that I chose for my centerpiece
in high school. I remember vividly how disturbing it was to read about such
negative treatment and by reading the atrocities, it was easier to commit
myself to never letting something like that happen again. The story, though in
the recent past, was a powerful and inspirational story that whetted my
interest of the Holocaust. Finally, after graduating from middle school, our
class went on a trip to the east coast, and we went to Washington, D.C. On the
trip, we saw many historical sights and learned much about our country�s past.
But the most gut-wrenching, powerful place we went was the Holocaust Museum. I
still remember the room of shoes in there, where shoes of those who died in the
Holocaust are piled high. The image of those shoes being tossed into a pile,
being the only remains of the people to document, and the large number of shoes
made this particular room so powerful. Thus, because of my family history and
the emotional attachment I have made with such literature and Holocaust
studies, I chose to do my unit of study on Holocaust literature and World War
II experience.
Launching
the Unit:
For a
history class, I interviewed my grandmother Marianne Bahlke about her life and
what it was like to live through World War II. Here is a portion of what she
shared with me:
Marianne:
We moved to the city. And we lived in, when we lived where I was born, it was
kind of, you could just walk in kind of, it was first floor or something. This
one was two stories up the apartment. So, I have some good memories there
actually even though my dad was gone already. Okay, so we moved there. Then we
were evacuated because they wanted the children and the mothers out of the big
cities. They were bombing the heck out of it. They were really bombing the
city. I remember what we would do. WE would have a suitcase next to our bed.
Now this is going to be long.
Ana:
Okay.
M: Do you
want that?
A: Yeah.
M:
Because it will teach you, actually, because I don�t think you knew all of this
stuff. We would have suitcases next to our beds so when the alarm would go off
we would all go down into a basement or into a big bunker that was kind of
round and had a cone top on it so that when to bomb would drop it would reflect
it, deflect it I guess. And then, so I remember that. I remember coming home,
coming out, the alarm would go off again and we would get out of the bunker and
people were all over. And places were burning, apartments were burning, houses
would just be burning, rubble everywhere. And the bunker, by the way, wasn�t
very far from us. And we would come around the corner and our place was still
standing. I remember the place across the street, apartment building across the
street burning, burning. Because they would throw bombs that they were called,
I don�t know what they called them here, but they called them burning bombs,
�brun bomben� in German. And they would actually have all the stuff in them so
when they would explode, it would just burn. Some wouldn�t do it, but some did.
I remember this particular house just burning. And I remember seeing that. And
I was pretty little then, probably maybe 4 or 5. As a matter of fact, I thought
I saw a person in there. But I probably didn�t. You know, walking or something.
It couldn�t have been, but it seemed like there was some figure, maybe it was,
I don�t know, burning.
This
interview transcription shares the life of my grandmother and her experiences
in moving from place to place and having to go down into a bunker to
escape the war that was waging right around her and her family. Her father died
in the first air raid, she says, because he was too stubborn to go into the
bunker with everyone else. This story of loss is not the only one; many people
lost loved ones during World War II, and people continue to lose those they
love today.
Assignment:
Write about an
incredible sense of loss that you�ve felt sometime in your life. It doesn�t
have to be a person; it could be your favorite CD or toy or something that
meant a lot to you as a child. Try to capture images and emotions like Marianne
did in the interview. Don�t be afraid to explore those things that you don�t
talk or write about often; many times it�s those things that make good
writing.
�Such Innocent
Words�
Yala Korwin
Train
camp shower
Gas
furnace smoke
Bent and
transfigured
Shoes
hair soap
Mattress
lampshade
Twisted
defiled forever
Common words
Transmuted
Horror
loss
This poet
lived and experienced the Holocaust in Germany. There, she lived in a
concentration camp, then was eventually freed. The poem is simply a list of
images that she saw in the camp, things that she saw every day. Its simplicity
allows the images themselves to be more influential. The poem moves from simple
images that are seen to more powerful and concentrated images, �Bent and
transfigured,� �Twisted defiled forever.� They explain her feelings and her
thoughts in few words.
Questions/Responses:
What do you
think of this poem? What emotions does it convey? How does it make you
feel?
This poet
wrote other poems; this one is the shortest. Seeing this poem, do you think you
could write a poem? If so, what would you write your poem about?
Ask yourself
what image/word/line grabs your attention the most. You may share the
image/word/line with the class if you so choose. After, write a paragraph or
two explaining why that captured you and what it means to you as an
individual.
Night by Elie Wiesel
In this
book, Wiesel talks about his life in the concentration camp called Auschwitz in
Poland. He documents the movement from his home to the camp and being separated
from his family when he needs them the most. It�s a canonical work, one that�s
taught in high school, and one that has a huge emotional impact on many
students (and it�s short enough for students to actually read without being too
hesitant).
Assignment:
Write a short story
while reading/after reading the book inspired by the story. It should meet the
following criteria:
Center
around something that actually happened to you (or a loved one).
Include
some of the writing techniques that are found in the book.
Be
open-ended, meaning it�s an evolving story, since life evolves as well.
Young Adult Literature Selections
The Cage by Ruth Minsky Sender
�After
Mama is taken away by the Nazis, Riva and her younger brothers cling to their
mother�s brave words to help them endure life in the Lodz ghetto. Then the
family is rounded up, deported to Auschwitz, and separated. Now Riva is alone.
At Auschwitz, and later in the work camps at Mittelsteine and Grafenort, Riva
vows to love, and to hope-for Mama, for her brothers, for the millions of other
victims of the nightmare of the Holocaust. And through determination and
courage, and unexpected small acts of kindness, she does live-to write the
unforgettable memoir that is a testament to the strength of the human spirit.�
-Simon & Schuster
Witness by Joshua M. Greene and Shiva Kumar
This book
stemmed from the videotaping at Yale University of first-hand accounts of the
Holocaust. Some of those very interviews were deposited into this book;
twenty-seven personal accounts fill the pages, some from camp survivors, other
from American military personnel, and still others from resistance fighters.
This book truly captures the many different angles that can be taken of the
Holocaust.
Activity:
Write a story about
something that happened to you; it must be a true story. It should include at
least two other people. After you write the story, write another of the same
situation, but from the perspective of the other people in the story. Repeat
the process until all of the perspectives have been explored, then read it to
explore and better appreciate others� feelings.
I Never Saw
Another Butterfly by
Hana Volavkova
Children�s
poetry and drawings keep the Holocaust alive through the pages of this book.
Even though it�s a rather low reading level and the language is very
simplistic, this would be a good choice because the images and the accounts are
no less gruesome or difficult to hear.
Activity:
Choose your favorite
poem and write a poem inspired by the one you chose. The poem must be about the
Holocaust and must be written from the perspective of a child or young adult.
Then, everyone will share what they�ve written, as long as they feel
comfortable doing so.
Maus I: A
Survivor�s Tale: My Father Bleeds History by Art Spiegelman
This is a
graphic novel in which Spiegelman does a wonderful job of staying true to
facts. Through interviews with his father, he gains enough knowledge to be able
to tell the story in a marriage of art and text that tempts the reader to side
with the Jews, represented by mice, over the Nazis, represented by cats. It�s
creative, yet powerful, and playful, yet serious.
The Hiding
Place by Corrie Ten Boom
and John & Elizabeth Sherrill
One Dutch
watchmaker made a huge difference. In this memoir, two sisters are sent to a
concentration camp for helping Jews escape. Most notable is the faith and the
perseverance required to overcome such treatment. After the experience, Corrie
Ten Boom became an evangelist and shared about how good triumphs over
evil.
Activity:
Think of a time when you
were overcome by someone else�s evil. Capture your emotions and write them as a
story. Then, whether or not �good� actually triumphed, write an ending in which
good triumphs over evil.
Other
activity: What drives
you, motivates you, pushes you forward day by day? It can be a mentor, a
friend, a sibling, God. Share aloud the person(s) that give you
motivation.
I Have
Lived a Thousand Years
by Livia Bitton Jackson
This book
follows 13-year-old Livia in her experience of the Holocaust in Hungary. She,
like Elie Wiesel, ends up in the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. Her
documentation of the camp is extremely personal; she mentions the yellow star
that she and other Jews were forced to wear, which made her feel �marked and
humiliated.�
Other
Projects to Extend the Unit:
The
Interview
Interview someone who lived through
something traumatic (this is open-ended and can mean anything from war, 9/11,
or death, anything). Record the interview and transcribe it later. Then, write
an essay on what you learned and how that changes your perspective on the
event, or if it does.
Trauma
and Coping
Life
can offer some pretty difficult circumstances. Granted, they may not be as
difficult as the ones faced by Elie Wiesel and other Holocaust survivors (or
those who died), but they�re physically and emotionally taxing nonetheless. In
a well-developed essay, write about how to cope and even grow from difficult
life experiences, keeping in mind the experiences we�ve read. If it would help,
assume the character of one of the people we read. Imagine how they would react
and cope.
Works
Cited
Bahlke,
Marianne. Personal interview. 15 Mar. 2009.
Bitton-Jackson,
Livia. I Have Lived a Thousand Years: Growing Up in the Holocaust. New
York: Simon
and Schuster, 1997.
Green, Joshua
M. and Shiva Kumar. Witness: Voices from the Holocaust. New York:
Touchstone,
2000.
Korwin, Yala.
�Such Innocent Words.� To Tell the Story - Poems of the Holocaust. New
York: Holocaust
Library Publications, 1987.
Sender, Ruth
Minsky. The Cage. New York: Aladdin Paperbacks, 1986.
Spiegelman,
Art. Maus I: A Survivor�s Tale: My Father Bleeds History. New York:
Random House,
Inc., 1986.
Ten Boom,
Corrie and John & Elizabeth Sherrill. The Hiding Place. Grand
Rapids: Chosen Books,
2006.
Volavkova,
Hana. I Never Saw Another Butterfly. New York: Schocken Books, Inc.,
1993.
Wiesel, Elie. Night.
New York: Bantam, 1960.