the children that were involved in the holocaust had to try to protect themselves and others from starvation
, life risking medical experiments, and death. during the holocaust many Jewish children were
Separated from their parent and sent to a camp that was only meant for children.
the food children received
During the holocaust the food children received in the concentration camps was either old and expired or molded but because of the condition the children were in being as skinny as a skeleton. The places that they had to live in they had no choice to eat it and then got sick from it because of eating it. "Most children had to smuggle bits and pieces of food into the barracks and hope that they do not get caught by the Nazi soldiers". When they brought in that food they had to share it with the other children instead of eating it themselves.
teenagers age 12 and older finding ways to survive
the work children did in the time during the holocaust
The Nazi soldier made children twelve years and older do labor like mining and loading ammunition into the guns or the job of being a dummy for medical experiments for new medication or injections. The children also had a job of their own to accomplish and that was to try and take care of each other to share the amount of food they had. They had to work hard to stay alive and survive the war while it lasted as long as it had to.
young children in a concentration camp
types of medical experiments that were done on children
The types of medical tests and experiments done on the children done by the different medical doctors. "Theses doctors did experiments like seeing how much air pressure a human can stand, different types of injections and tests for tuberculosis that they did on children at the age of five years of age".
innocent children in the holocaust
references:
“children during the holocaust.” united holocaust memorial museum. united states memorial museum, washington D.C, 1 Apr. 2010. Web. 3 May 2010. <http://www.ushmm.org///.php?moduleId=10005142>.
“children of the holocaust.” junior scholastic 109.15 (2007): 16-18. Middle Search Plus. Web. 3 May 2010. <http://web.ebscohost.com//?vid=8&hid=7&sid=ad2250eb>.
“lives of children in the time of the holocaust.” humanitas-international. R.H. Perez de Cruet, 1996-2006. Web. 6 May 2010. <http:///www.humanitas-international.org//.htm#toolbar>.
Byers, Ann. The holocaust camps. Berkeley heights NJ: Enslow publishers inc.,
1998. Print.
Yeatts, Tabatha. The holocaust survivors . Berkeley hieghts NJ : Enslow
publishers inc., 1998. Print.
Comments (1)
penny said
at 1:02 pm on May 14, 2010
the pictures are good, but maybe add a little bit of color. black and white could be boring and won't attract many people.
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