Can you imagine waking up to the screams and cries of your friends and family? Having to do intensive labor while fearing for your life? That was the life of a Jew from 1933 to 1945, if you weren’t already dead. All the dehumanization, fear, and prejudice in the Holocaust make it hard to find any light. There was so much dehumanization in the Holocaust that it oversaw all positives.”They were forced to dig huge trenches.Without passion or haste they shot their prisoners.” They treated the prisoners like they were below humans, that they didn’t even deserve to be gifted a quick death, but instead had them dig their own graves as each lifeless body flopped in as bullets sprayed their backs. The ones that didn’t die instantly would suffer in pain from the wounds, and some would die after hours, but “Malka, the young girl who lay dying for 3 days” lay lifeless, but still conscious, reminiscing in the thoughts that she wouldn’t be saved and would have to be face to face with death …show more content…
“Tobie, the tailor who begged to die before his sons were killed” Wanting to die should never be one's desire, nevertheless begging to be killed. Tobie must’ve felt powerless against the guards, so having his son die, would’ve left him in a deep depression. Being forced to watch your sons be killed is an ultimate example of dehumanization, but it wasn’t the only thing that happened in the Holocaust. The prejudice in the Holocaust imposed so much fear that people would stay silent in times when they should’ve spoken up. “When they came for me, there was no one left to speak out” Everyone was silent because they weren’t the ones being affected, but once they were, no one was able to speak out against it. “I remember it happened yesterday, or eternity ago. A young Jewish boy discovers the