Papers 1751-1760 of total 1966 found.
Category: /History
…, as they stared into mine, has never left me.” (Wiesel 109) For Wiesel, the nightmare of the concentration camps was over, or was it just beginning? Until I read Night, I had barely heard or thought about the horrors of the Holocaust. What hell these people…
Details: Words: 1967 | Pages: 7.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /History
…“undesirables” in the Holocaust. How did this happen? How was it possible that a failed artist could rebuild Germany in just six years, challenge the world to mortal combat, and nearly win? He simply possessed what few other politicians of his day had, he was a man…
Details: Words: 2010 | Pages: 7.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /Literature/English
…, but also with all United Nations member states. It is time for our governments to not only look regretfully, or with a pointed finger, to the past, such as the annihilation of the Native American populations or the German Holocaust, but to stop todays human…
Details: Words: 2316 | Pages: 8.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…world, in which relations between the superpowers were based mainly on "balance-of-power calculations" (Hoffmann, 1990), a nuclear holocaust, for example, had become highly likely. He sought that India should stay out of the superpowers' way in the nuclear…
Details: Words: 2423 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /Literature/English
…, Americans have quite a bit of knowledge and experience of abortion. Yet the debate over legal abortion is curiously abstract: we might be discussing brain transplants. Farfetched analogies abound: abortion is like the Holocaust, or slavery; denial of abortion…
Details: Words: 2383 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /Literature/English
…worried that people of Japanese ancestry were working as spies. The government rounded up Japanese Americans and put them into camps much like that of the Holocaust. They were later released and commended for their patriotism.(Nash 410-412…
Details: Words: 2203 | Pages: 8.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…is illegal in another: German law prohibits claims that the Holocaust did not happen, but this does not stop white supremacists from the US or another country from transmitting this claim to their sympathizers in Germany. This is a complicated issue because…
Details: Words: 2193 | Pages: 8.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…by the gradual takeover of financial markets and religions [Burstow 78]. Along with this affair, two centuries later, was the rise of white supremacist beliefs, particularly of the holocaust. These horrific ideologies maintained that Jews were outside of the “master…
Details: Words: 2578 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /History
…rationality, as liberals believe. In realism, individuals give in to group rationales, i.e. German participation and support of the holocaust. Of course, most of the population was horrified at what was happening, but as a nation of Germans, felt perhaps…
Details: Words: 2315 | Pages: 8.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /History
…. The Germans that survived the war did not want to be associated with the Holocaust and a war the took millions of lives. Zero hour was their way of saying they wanted to start over. Eventually, however, zero hour became a term for all of Europe. After…
Details: Words: 2477 | Pages: 9.0 (approximately 235 words/page)