I Have Lived A Thousand Years By Livia Bitton-Jackson

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Pages: 4

“The dreaded moment has come: There is no escape. We are in the hands of the “SS,” mourned Livia Bitton-Jackson as she had to go sign up for the concentration camp (25). The SS also know as “Schutzstaffel” is a Nazi party who served as their leader, Adolf Hitler's body guard. When World War II had arrived the SS had more than 250,00 members. These members in the SS had jobs in intelligence operations and had to run Nazi concentration camps (“SS”). Those Jews involved in this situation responded to the adversity with different emotions.
One response to being caught up in the Holocaust is despair. In I Have Lived a Thousand Years by Livia Bitton-Jackson, Bitton-Jackson says “I sit on a boulder at a distance, and begin to cry. My god. My dear
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“But, officer, please. That was my mother right before. Let me go after her, please. Please. I’m strong. I can work hard. I promise, I will work very hard! Please let me go after my mother!” (Bitton-Jackson 138). Bitton-Jackson is trying her hardest to convince the officer to let her go out to be with her mother. She is determined by listing all the things she can do well and will work her hardest to be with her mother. In the speech Keep Memory Alive spoken by Elie Wiesel, this is a great example of showing determination because he happen to be in Auschwitz, a concentration camp. “And I tell him that I have tried. That I have tried to keep memory alive, that I have tried to fight those who would forget. Because if we forget, we are guilty, we are accomplices.” (Wiesel 236). It is clear that Wiesel is determined for everybody to keep the memory alive of Concentration camps …show more content…
Rosenthal reveals this by saying this, “For every visitor there is one particular bit of horror that he knows he will never forget. For some it is seeing the rebuilt gas chamber at Oświęcim and being told that is the “small one.” (412). This reveals that some people only see the small gas chamber and think it is a big one and frightens them as they can not imagine how the people in the Holocaust feel. Bitton-Jackson reveals fear by saying “In time we learned to stifle even our whimpers. In time we learned to endure in silence.” (29). This reveals that people who are in the concentration camps are scared to even cry. They have to find a different way to show their