Madame Schachter is treated with disdain and hostility by her fellow Jewish prisoners during their transport to Auschwitz. They view her frantic visions of fire and flames as delusions, leading them to mock and silence her. This reflects the fear and denial present among the group as they struggle to cope with their dire situation. Ultimately, her treatment highlights the breakdown of community and empathy in the face of overwhelming trauma.
Madame Schachter's treatment on the train foreshadows the suffering and mistreatment that the Jews will face in the concentration camp. Her screams and visions represent the fear and trauma that the Jews will experience during their time in the camp, highlighting the brutality and inhumanity of the Holocaust.
To keep madame schachter quiet, several strong men from the train car would beat her, till she stopped. They nearly killed her several times. While and after they did this, her son would just sit next to her holding her hand.
Madame Schachter screams in the book "Night" because she has visions of a fire consuming the Jews on the train, symbolizing the impending horror and destruction they are about to face in the concentration camps. Her screams are a manifestation of her distress and terror at what she sees in her visions.
The nightmares of Madame Schachter's from the book "Night" foreshadowed the horrors waiting for the Jews in concentration camps. The book was written by Elie Wiesel based on his experiences in the concentration camps during the Holocaust until World War II.
the only group of Christians that were 'fellow Jews' were of course those who were converted Jews (though Christian in faith they were classified as Jewish through their heritage). They were treated the same as any other Jew by the Nazis and it would be harsh to say that they were persecuted by the Jews, discriminated against would be closer to the mark, and then only by the more extreme within the ghettos.
People who were not Jews were treated differently than the Jews in Nazi Germany. Some of the Jews were German citizens but they were treated as Jews.
they are treated really good
They were treated in the same way as other Jews: one couldn't buy oneself out of the Holocaust.
The Jews Were Not liked because of who they were and what they believed in.
because Jews are Jews. All Jews were seen as the same and none were treated more favourably than any others.
No. The Sonderkommandos were mostly Jews. Other Jews recognize that what the Sonderkommandos did was to for self-preservation of the Holocaust and not because they "liked" cremating their fellow Jews.
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