Miss B
English 9
Oct. 3, 2014
"I happened to tell a University of Chicago professor at a cocktail party about the raid as I had seen it, about the book I would write. He was a member of a thing called The Committee on Social Thought. And he told me about the concentration camps, and about how the Germans had made soap and candles out of the fat of dead Jews and so on. ... All I could say was, 'I know, I know. I know.' (Wikiquote)" // "The British had no way of knowing it, but the candles and the soap were made from the fat of rendered Jews and Gypsies and fairies and communists, and other enemies of the State (Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.)." -- Two excerpts from Kurt Vonnegut's critically acclaimed novel, Slaughterhouse Five. Candles and soap made from the fat of deceased members of the Jewish race are truly awesome. One of the biggest conspiracies surrounding WWII is that Nazis used fat from the Jews they slaughtered to make soap and candles for income and to strike fear throughout the world (Mark Weber). It has been proven, years later, to be mostly myth; although there is evidence that they did experiment on a small amount of soap made from …show more content…
Whether that thing be a not so vegetarian sandwich or a bar of soap, humans tend to steer clear of the thought of a body becoming something more postmortem. It’s been proven that Nazis experimented on creating a soap made of Jewish fat, but in very small numbers spite popular belief (Stewart Ain). In the Nuremberg Trials, a bar of soap was used as evidence against him. Tested eight years ago for signs of human remains, it was proven that the single bar of soap contained fat. It is unknown how many contained actual remains, but the soap used for the trial did in fact hold human fat (Stewart Ain). So even though a very small number of bars actually contained remains, it is still awesome to think