Tuesday, 5 July 2016

Music inspired by the holocaust

Please follow this link for a piece of music one of us composed about the holocaust.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zmrCDWFVo2o

The melancholy cello tune at the beginning represents the hardships that the Jews had to endure. Then the flute plays a melody in a major key that sounds sweet. This gives the idea that hope is still there. However then the cello tune comes back and you are reminded again that the Jews didn't have much hope. There is a section of trills which crescendo and this symbolises how life is getting worse and worse. Suddenly there is a loud chord and a crash on the symbols and this represents when they decided to start killing the Jews. In the next section there are lots of loud fast notes and this represents life in the concentration camps. The flute comes back with a sad melody and this is acknowledging the deaths. The sad tune is a memorial to all those who died. After this, the cello melody from the start returns and this rounds of the piece and concludes that the holocaust was a terrible event for the Jews.

A Drawing Inspired by the Holocaust

This drawing represents the situation of the Jews during the holocaust.
The Guns show the Nazis because they murdered the Jews, and their sign is on the side of the gun, so it is clear that they are the Nazis. The star sign is representing the Jews, they are being killed by the Nazis, no one stopping them and the barbed wire describes that they were imprisoned, and have no freedom in their actions; they just have to wait to die. The way I did the star is puzzlingly intertwining telling you two things, that their life was extremely complicated, but they stuck together, as much as they could. It was done in black and white to show the darkness of the holocaust, and that would be what it would look like if it was done at that time. This picture for some, creates emotions and brings the holocaust back to life.

Websites we have used

Below is a list of websites that we used to help get information for our blog. If you want to find out more, try following some of these links.


Why did we choose to do a blog?

We chose to do a blog for our holocaust project because it is a unique and creative idea and we are able to educate other people who aren't just in our school. Also it gave us a challenge to make something that we may not have done before. It was a new experience for us to work together as a team. It improved our communication skills as we had to talk and decide what to post and who would do what. We all took responsibility for different topics and we had one team leader who edited and uploaded the posts.

We really enjoyed this project because it was an interesting topic for us. It was very emotional and touched certain members of our group but overall we were glad we did so much research because we have learnt lots from this experience. We now know lots more about the holocaust and hope that our readers do too. Please feel free to leave a comment about what you think, some constructive criticism or any suggestions to improve the blog.

Monday, 4 July 2016

The Geographical Side of the Holocaust

There are many geographical features of the holocaust and to help explain things, we have created two maps.

The first map shows which parts of Europe were owned by the Germans, and which parts weren't. From this map we can infer that the Germans invaded and occupied many countries in Europe, particularly those near to Germany. The Germans invaded France but didn't get to Spain and we think that if the war went on for much longer, Britain could have been invaded too. Countries such as Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia were known as Baltic states.

This map shows where in Europe the concentration and extermination camps were. From this map we can infer that a lot of the concentration camps are found in the North East of Germany, for example Bergen-Belsen and Buchenwald. However most of the extermination camps are found in Poland. This may have been because Poland was home to the largest Jewish population of any European country which made it an ideal location. Also it is quite a remote location and this makes it easier to hide what is going on from the rest of the world.

What have we learnt from the holocaust?

The holocaust shocked the world however we have not completely learned our lesson. There have been several other mass killings which made us wonder, can we ever live in a world where everyone accepts each other?

Some examples of genocides after the holocaust took place in Rwanda, Cambodia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. In 1944, 800,000 Tutsis and pro-peace Hutus were murdered in Rwanda. From 1975 to 1979, the communist party in Cambodia committed genocide against around 1.7 million Cambodians.  In 1992, Bosnian Muslims were targeted in Bosnia-Herzegovina and at least 7500 men were killed. Hearing about these events made us feel shocked as we thought that people in our world would have learnt their lesson from the holocaust.
Today, people are still murdering and acting extremely cruelly to other people, just because of a different race or religion. This begs the question: have we really learnt our lesson? The holocaust shocked the world but these cruel acts are still happening so we haven’t really learnt our lesson from the holocaust. We have not fully learnt to not kill people, but we have learnt that a mass killing of a group of people could lead to devastation throughout the world. We have learnt that some people have very different views on a perfect world. People are still judging people on their beliefs and influences. We think that although discrimination still happens in our world, it is important to try and stop this. In an ideal world, everyone would be happy and peaceful and we would all accept each other. However this may not ever happen. We need to keep spreading our opinions about stopping discrimination and try to persuade people that it doesn’t matter what your religion, race or skin colour is. On this blog we are trying to educate people about the holocaust in the hope that it will never happen again


The world is getting better at showing respect for those who have been murdered. For example, after the attacks in Paris many people posted 'Pray for Paris' or other messages of respect on social media and huge support was shown for the families of lost ones. We may not be living in a world free from discrimination but our world is getting better at accepting people for who they are.

Sunday, 3 July 2016

Anne Frank


Anne Frank was born in Frankfurt, Germany in 1929. She moved to Amsterdam in 1930, where her father worked, because anti-Jew laws were put into place in Germany. In Holland Jews were treated as equals. These rules were put in because Hitler had an image of a perfect German in his head (Aryans), and Jews, gypsies, and other races were treated differently because the Aryans were considered the best. Jews had to wear a special star if they were over the age of 6 to show what they were.


On May 10th 1940 Holland was invaded by Germany. Shortly after the invasion Anne and her family tried to emigrate to Britain and the U.S.A but failed. It eventually became too dangerous for them in Holland, so they went into hiding. The secret hiding place was in an attic above Otto Frank’s (Anne's dad) work. It wasn't only for the Franks but for the Van Daan family (Hermann, Petronella and their son Peter) and Albert Dussel. Hermann Van Daan worked for Otto Franks business.
Otto Frank told a few people he worked with that they were going into hiding and many agreed to help them. One of them, called Miep Gies, worked as an office assistant and became really good friends with the Frank family. When they went into hiding she agreed to them food and offered friendship, even though she knew she could be killed if they were caught. When the Franks were caught she went straight to the annex where they were hiding and found and kept Anne’s diary.
On the 4th August 1944 the secret annex was raided by the Germans and they were sent off to concentration camps. Anne went to Westerbork transit camp and then to Auschwitz-Birkenau with her sister Margot, her mother Edith, Peter Van Daan, Hermann Van Daan and Petronella Van Daan. Albert Dussel also went with Anne but was then deported to Neuengamme concentration camp near Hamburg and died. Otto went to  Auschwitz-Birkenau and managed to avoid selection for the gas chambers and survived until the camp was liberated in January 1945. Anne and her sister Margot died of Typhus a few weeks before the camp was liberated by British troops.
Otto was the only survivor of the camps and when he came back, Miep gave him Anne’s diaries. He the decided to get them published, not thinking that a diary of a young girl would ever be this big. Anne’s diaries are sold in 67 different languages and 10 years after publication in 1947 over 30 million had been sold.

Death Camps

Death camps are very different from concentration camps first found in Germany. Apart from the ones that were part factory, they were basically places of mass murder. There were over six million murders in these camps, although the Nazi’s did destroy evidence of the amount they knew they had murdered. Some prisoners escaped and told the polish resistance movement what is going on who then gave the information to London to the Polish Government in exile who accordingly informed the Allies.

The most infamous death camps were Auschwitz-Birkenau (over two million), Sobibor, Treblinka, Chelmno, Belzec, Majdanek, Stutthof.

A day in the life on a death camp would go something like this:

4 a.m.: Awakening
You are woken up by the kapo shouting at you.  You must get up, find your shoes (but somebody maybe took them which often means you are killed because you can’t work) and start quickly. From the straw mattress you'll have to make your bed as neatly as you can, with blankets made up exactly over the straw mattress. Of course, this is impossible to do and the kapo knows it. The "bettenbau" is just a good opportunity for him to beat the prisoners.
The bed is made now, and so now you wash. You run out of the barrack and struggle to  the sanitary facility. There are only a couple of sanitary facilities for hundreds of prisoners. You have just minutes for washing. It is nearly time for the morning roll call, and the kapos will beat the slow ones, occasionally until they die.

The "Breakfast":
On you, you must have your mess-tin. If you don’t have your mess-tin, you don’t get any food. You get about 10 ounces of bread and some "coffee" Sometimes, if you’re lucky, you'll get some margarine or a tiny slice of sausage with your bread. The "coffee" is tasteless. No sugar or milk, obviously. The bread you just got will be the only proper food you'll receive until the next day. You’ll try and savour it through the day, if you have the strength to. The sharing out of the food is another good time for the kapos to have some "fun". They chuck the bread in the mud, or they shove you while you get the coffee, wasting it on the ground. But one rule is that if you waste food you will be punished, even if it is not your food

Morning Roll Call:
All the prisoners line up. All prisoners must be at roll call, including the ones who died during the night. Their bodies are lined up in front of you or in front of your barrack. Under control of the SS guards and officers, the people counting the thousands of prisoners are the kapos. A mistake doing the counting and it all must start again, making the kapos nervous, dangerous and on the edge. During the roll call, you must stand to attention, even if it is raining or snowing. It is forbidden to move or to talk during the roll call. Your poor striped uniform, made from an incredibly rough cloth, does not shield you against the cold weather. Every day, some prisoners catch a cold whilst doing the roll call and die in the next following days.  Even some others die during the roll call itself. During the time some people are even to weak for that. Their dead bodies, as well as the deaths of the night, will be sent to the crematories after the roll call.

Going to the yard:
You then run to join your work team. You'll leave the camp under the hard guard of SS and kapos, always screaming at you. You'll reach the yard by walking. Maybe the SS will command your work team to sing during marching. Just at the gate of the camp, there is a row of SS waiting for your work team. 

The Work:
If you are lucky, you will get given a good tool, a shovel or a pickaxe. Otherwise, you'll have to work with your hands... and this may lead death because you can’t work as fast as the guards want you to. The day will be very long: 12-14 hours of work. The work is painful, and usually useless: to transport heavy sand bags from one place to another, to extract and carry massive stones, to dig trenches or to make a tunnel. Perhaps instead, you are working in a factory but this does not improve anything. This is extermination by work. Everything has to be done as fast as it can, and always the kapos and the SS barking insults and giving beatings. If a guard thinks you are not working fast enough, you'll be beaten up, maybe until you die. Don't even think about pausing for a bit or going slow. It will be thought of as sabotage and this instantly means death.

The Lunch Break:
Then you have lunch break, not consisting of a lot, just soup, and not even proper soup.
A whistle signals the "lunch break" is over. The work begins again, always at high speed. The afternoon seems harder and worse because you are starving and you feel you are loosing strength.  Maybe a prisoner faints and the guards beat him up. If this weak man can't rise, he'll be killed and you will have to carry his dead-weight  back to the camp for the evening roll call.

Return to the Camp:
A last signaling whistle: your work team marches back to the camp, and the people alive are carrying bodies of the prisoners who died today. Maybe the guards will order the team to sing again. Once at in the camp, the SS are controlling your team. It's a new opportunity for them to hurt, to kill.

Evening Roll Call:
All the prisoners line up by rows of ten. The kapos are counting the prisoners and the dead. If a prisoner tried to escape, all the prisoners will stand and stay at attention at their roll-call place until he is retrieved. The evening roll call can take hours, sometimes even 10 hours, before it is over. The evening roll call is also the time when lots get hung. Sometimes, after a hanging, all the prisoners have to go in front of the hanging device to look at the prisoner, as a warning.

The Dinner:
The evening roll call is finally over. You run so you can to receive your dinner, which is meant to be a kind of soup just like the one you received at noon. If you spared some bread, you could eat it now, with the soup. 

The Evening:
You return to your resting place. In no way you are allowed to leave the barrack during the night. The "blockfuerher" is there for you and your group. The blockfuerhers wear green triangles, which means “real criminals”. They have the job to decide who will die and who will live until they die the next days or are chosen to die in the next days . Maybe he will let you be, until tomorrow morning. But, perhaps he will choose to have some enjoyment, and will make you go through exercises like crawling, jumping, running until you faint, fall over. Eventually, you have permission to rest on your uncomfortable mattress. There are five of you in a bunk bed, with only one blanket. The barrack is not heated.