Germany was the worst living place for the Jews. In Germany was where the concentration camps for the Jews were located, where they got torchered and where they would get throwned in the crematorium if they weren't no more good workers. Also Germany was where they only got fed with a piece of bread, black coffee, and thick soup. Germans had a process called the selection process, that was when they had all the Jew workers walk or run around the German doctor's to see who was good and who was bad and from there they decided who was going to die and thrown in the furnance. For those who were at the concentration camps in Germany, they had to be over the age of 18 and less the the age of 40 I believe, or else they'll get killed. The best thing at the end was that the Jews got saved by the United States.
What I'll remember longest about this book is that Elie was a very strong man who went through a lot and still survived which to me is unbelievable. The images that'll stick with me is the images of the kids an others getting thrown in the furnance and also the way the Jews look after so much work and so little food. It really didn't change my thinking in any way. The saddest part for me was when Elie's dad couldn't keep up no more and he finally gave up and later that night they had to take him away and throw him in the furnance and the last thing Elie heard from his dad was his name. The most horrifying part to me was when the son kill his father for the piece of bread but at the end the kid got killed for the piece of bread also. the part that made me more angry was the way the Germans try to take the Jews away from the camps and moved them somewhere else so the other people who were going to save the Jews wouldn't save them. The most confusing part was that, how did Moshe the Beattle knew that the Germans were coming for the Jews and taking them away. Finally, the most touching part was when Elie at the end got saved and also that he never again found out what happened to his mother or sister.
Gishela C.
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