it shows how people behave under the most extreme conditions.
You should write about the daily life in the camps!
The more I read about the Holocaust and the more pictures I see, I find more questions are raised than answers provided. What answers could there be to the senseless slaughter of millions of human beings? I would write about the families that were torn apart. I would write about the faith that was lost. I would write about God's presence during the Holocaust and try to explore why He allowed it to happen.
Yes and it was horrible... it's called motto.
you can, but whether they read the letters themselves or not is another issue.
Grammar and sentence structure, assuming that you already have a plan of what you are writing about.
Waht you feel is the right thing, attempt not to go into detail of what you have learned about the Holocaust, it might bring back horrible memories. But make it ver clear how you respect him/her.
I wonder if she mentions this in any of her books. It would be an idea to look.
You could write about Anne Frank, death camps, concentration camps.
so that people would be able to know what happened.
It would be best if you have a letter of introduction, from an academic or from an institution dealing with Holocaust survivors, of they decide that you are not someone who might be (inadvertently) harmful or indelicate, then they might introduce you.
One fact about the Holocaust is that Jews were killed because Adolf Hitler wanted one race in Germany/Europe and Jews weren't that race.
In the camps, I guess. not. Before, of course. Before the war, they were regular citizens.