Field trip to the museum of tolerance
In our modern society now, we lived in a joyful, peaceful world, words like war, kill, plunder sounds far from our life. But do you know that back to 18 centuries, there were people age like us who been killed group by group because their race and this event happened in history called the “the holocaust.” Today our class bring us to the museum of tolerance to knowledge one of the most brutality crime of the Jewish Holocaust during world war II by the Nazis.
Before we start with the Holocaust, I want to talk about the initiator of evil – Adolf Hitler. Hitler was chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945, serving as dictator and leader of the Nazi Party, or National Socialist German Workers Party, for the bulk of his time in power. Hitler’s fascist policies precipitated World War II. They led to the genocide known as the Holocaust, which resulted in the deaths of some six million Jews and another five million noncombatants.[ A&E Television Networks] He joined World war I, and later his ambition motived him to Munich and continued to work for the German military. As an intelligence officer, he monitored the activities of the German Workers’ Party- DAP. He adopted many of the anti-Semitic, nationalist, and anti-Marxist ideas of party founder Anton Drexler. In September 1919, Hitler joined the DAP, which changed its name to the- Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP) often abbreviated to Nazi. Hitler personally designed the Nazi party banner, appropriating the swastika symbol and placing it in a white circle on a red background. He soon gained notoriety for his vitriolic speeches against the Treaty of Versailles, rival politicians, Marxists, and Jews. In 1921, Hitler replaced Drexler as the Nazi party chairman. In our current generation, most time, we have known this man from the movie, article, game entertainment, etc. There are not many historic resources of him like what present in the museum of tolerance, and after the tour in the museum of tolerance, we acknowledge that Jewish is not the only race he aims at.
But what is his motivation for this? Why is Hitler such a racist man? According to the holocaust encyclopedia, for years before Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany, he was obsessed with ideas about race. In his speeches and writings, Hitler spread his beliefs in racial “purity” and the superiority of the “Germanic race”—what he called an Aryan master race. [ holocaust encyclopedia] He pronounced that his race must remain pure in order to one day take over the world. For Hitler, the ideal “Aryan” was blond, blue-eyed, and tall. When Hitler and the Nazis came to power, these beliefs became the government ideology, also known as propaganda, and were spread in publicly displayed posters, on the radio, in movies, in classrooms, and newspapers. The Nazis began to put their propaganda into practice with the support of German scientists who believed that the human race could be improved by limiting the reproduction of people considered “inferior. Beginning in 1933, German physicians could perform forced sterilizations, operations making it impossible for the victims to have children. Among the targets of this public program were Roma (Gypsies), an ethnic minority numbering about 30,000 in Germany, and disabled individuals, including the mentally ill and people born deaf and blind. Also victimized were about 500 African-German children, the offspring of German mothers and African colonial soldiers in the Allied armies that occupied the German Rhineland region after World War I. [ holocaust encyclopedia] But why does Hitler hate Jewish so much? According to the census of June 1933, the Jewish population of Germany consisted of about 500,000 people. Jews represented less than one percent of the total German population of about 67 million people. Eighty percent of the Jews in Germany about 400,000 people have German citizenship. The remainder were mostly Jews of Polish citizenship, many of whom were born in Germany and who had permanent resident status in Germany. After all, about 70 percent of the Jews in Germany live
After acknowledging the crime in the museum, the commentator also introduces the “Final solution” to us, what is clear is that the genocide of the Jews was the culmination of a decade of Nazi policy, under the rule of Adolf Hitler. The “Final Solution” was implemented in stages. After the Nazi party rise to power, state-enforced racism resulted in anti-Jewish legislation, boycotts, “Aryanization,” and finally, the “Night of Broken Glass” pogrom, all of which aimed to remove the Jews from German society. After the beginning of World War II, anti-Jewish policy evolved into a comprehensive plan to concentrate and eventually annihilate European Jewry. [ holocaust encyclopedia] After the Wannsee Conference in January 1942, the Nazis began the systematic deportation of Jews from all over Europe to six extermination camps established in former Polish territory — Chelmno, Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka, Auschwitz-Birkenau, and Majdanek. Extermination camps were killing centers designed to carry out genocide. About three million Jews were gassed in extermination camps. Consisted of gassings, shootings, random acts of terror, disease, and starvation that accounted for the deaths of about six million Jews, two-thirds of European Jewry.
This entire event should be unforgettable, not only in history but also in people’s minds. And that’s why the museum of tolerance is a remarkable museum that everyone should go, in the museum it used the artist way to shows people of the crimes that Nazis did. Many places the viewer could interact with, which made me felt the history so realism that I can’t even believe it. The museum presented many accurate histories; it used prejudice from people than using it to telling people how prejudice and racism could destroy people’s minds and make each other hate each other. I still remember we were sitting in a restaurant. There were two black people who fought with three white people, at the end the gunshot accidentally murdered a ladies life, it looks like a small fight in our life, but at the end, its became a tremendous thing that killed someone, and all start with peoples racism and prejudice. And we went to an underground prison, the wall is cold and heavy, the prison is old and dark, imaging people were locked down here day by day, year by year, but other people such as Nazis were plundered and killed out there. Most of all, this thing is real; it’s happened back then; every time when I think about this, my heart starts shaking, not only angry about what they did to them also be grateful for the peace in the world now.
After the tour in the museum of tolerance, I want to thank my professor for this experiment and the explanation from the museum. Before I never thought this Holocaust is such a big deal in the history, and mainly I never thought that a man’s prejudice could become a weapon took others life, as an international learner, I know that the war may be over centuries ago, but the discrimination between human is never going to stop, but I know I will finish that by looking at the biography in the museum corridor, I will stop the prejudice between people and make their death remarkable. As a designer, I know that my creation should not only bring ideology to each other also make people treated this impotently. For our world now, prejudice happened every day around us may be in somewhere in the world, just like recently the covid-19 virus, media, newspaper, they all start to blame other counties for this virus. Still, they never tried to unit people together and fought this thing together; for the country, we may from different races and bloodlines, but overall, we are humans, and we are all the same.