As the is An Adolf Hitler question.
The Nazi's burned the books to show the hatred to the Jews 20,000 books were burned many by Jews and others like si-fi they didint like imagination also albert ensteins works were burnt because he was a Jew.
"Where they burn books, at the end they also burn people" 1823 Heinrich Heine
shows how right that is about the Nazis
The quote is: 'Where they start by burning books, they ultimately burn people'. It is taken from a play by Heinrich Heine (1797-1856).
churches are never suppose to burn any book - heretical or otherwise. that is an old wives tale.
The gravel pits were used to kill the Jewish people, to burn them, or to shot them. But mostly to burn them. The gravel pits were used to kill the Jewish people, to burn them, or to shot them. But mostly to burn them.
Well, honey, Benjamin Franklin was mentioned in Fahrenheit 451 because he was one smart cookie who knew a thing or two about books and freedom of speech. Ray Bradbury probably threw his name in there to highlight the importance of knowledge and critical thinking in a society that was burning books left and right. So, to put it simply, ol' Ben Franklin was a symbol of intellectual freedom in a world gone mad.
The kk do,not Alabama.
The quote is: 'Where they start by burning books, they ultimately burn people'. It is taken from a play by Heinrich Heine (1797-1856).
The only reason anyone burns books is to destroy free thinking and to supress people.
did shi huangdi burn books
They dont do that alot anymore where I am. In the middle ages though, they would burn books because they thought that some of them were evil. Plus they did not want people to become too educated back then.
no it is not alegal to burn a bok
hurches burn heretical book states radical books
Their job is when the alarm sounds they go to the house where there are books and burn the house so the books burn
control people's mind, consolidate his ruling status.
A fireman's job is to burn books.
Well, it means that not reading books as bad burning them because either way the knowledge in the text will be forever forgotten.
Heinrich Heine, a German poet, wrote this in his play "Almansor" in 1821. The quote refers to the Nazi book burnings in 1933 and their subsequent persecution and extermination of people.
he got rid of them burn them all....