I assume you are asking about the Boy in the Striped Pajamas. Bruno was at a concentration camp. The camps were the places that the Jewish community was sent to and to die in. As a young boy there he experienced and saw what was happening in the camp and by trading with the young Jewish boy he became just another number in the gas chambers. I would point out that the biggest effect was on the father when he realized that his son was inside the camp he was commander of and he couldn't do anything. The Holocaust is the murder of 6 million people.
The Holocaust is over
He was born in 1938 in Britain and was not involved in the Holocaust.
The Nazis did not plan to murder all prisoners in camps built before the Holocaust
They legalized anti-Semitism, paving the way to the Holocaust.
Jack Eisner is an author who published a book about surviving the Naza Holocaust. It was published in 1980 under the title "The Survivor Of The Holocaust".
Hitler didn't just affect the Holocaust, he was the Holocaust.
he does not know what it is, nor does he ever have the opportunity to attempt to grasp it's scope.
They died.
Germany
There is remembrance of the Holocaust but there is no 'Holocaust movement'. That expression makes it sound like a political campaign.
No, not really.
because it did not affect them.
Anne Frank and Bruno from "The Boy in the Striped Pajamas" both live during World War II and experience the impacts of the Holocaust. However, Anne Frank's story is based on a real person who kept a diary while hiding from the Nazis, while Bruno is a fictional character who befriends a Jewish boy in a concentration camp. Both characters provide different perspectives on the horrors of the Holocaust.
Yes
Probably not at all is the simple answer.
it added theological debates.
Please have a look at the related question.