Children of the Holocaust
Download
Report
Transcript Children of the Holocaust
Children of the Holocaust
The Innocent Victims of
Prejudice and Genocide
Your Assignments
Look up a child of the Holocaust that
you would like to know more about
Print out the biography of the child
of your choice
Mark the text for relevant facts
Create a commemorative button
honoring this child
Marking the text with facts relevant to
the life of the child
Child’s name and family background
life in the camp or in hiding
circumstances of their death or release
Biography of a Holocaust Victim
Type in Children of
the Holocaust on a
Google search
Children of the
Holocaust
Choose a Child from the List
Name
Birth date
Place
Hans Ament
February 15, 1934
Vienna, Austria
Sura
Andrezejko
1927
Stawiski, Poland
Ulrich Wolfgang ArnheimNovember 2, 1927 Berlin,
Germany
Inge Auerbacher December 31, 1934
Kippenheim, Germany
Inge Auerbachber
At age 4 she and her
father was placed in a
concentration camp
August 22, 1942 Inge
and her family were
deported to the
Theresienstadt camp
in Czechoslovakia
The Auerbacher Family
This is Inge
Auerbacher with
her family
The title of her
book is I am a Star
Daily Life of the Child You
Selected
Terms you might need to explore
Concentration Camps- Auschwitz,
Dachau
Ghettos-Thereseinstadt
Kristallnacht-The night of broken
glass
The Jewish People
Imprisoned
Thereseinsdt
Ghetto
Czechoslovakia
15,000 children were
imprisoned there
Inge was one of only
100 children to
survive
A young girl unsure of her
fate
A girl from the
Theresienstadt ghetto
who was put on one
of the transports to
Auschwitz camp. The
girl is wearing a
yellow badge and
around her neck is a
string with a piece of
paper on which is
written the transport
number - 671.
Theresienstadt Ghetto
THERESIENSTADT
On November 24, 1941, the Germans
established a Jewish ghetto in the fortress
town of Terezin, Czechoslovakia. Known
by its German name, Theresienstadt,
until its liberation on May 8, 1945, it
functioned as a ghetto and transit camp
on the route to Auschwitz. Most of those
imprisoned in Theresienstadt were
German, Czech, Dutch, and Danish Jews;
elderly and prominent Jews and Jewish
veterans of World War I were also sent
there.
Work Makes You Free
This was a slogan used by the Nazis
It was a cruel way of giving false hope to the Jewish prisoners
The Outcome of the Holocaust
Liberation of
concentration
camp prisoners
The defeat of Hitler
US and Soviet
Troops invade
Germany
Nuremburg Trials
Cornell Note Taking Form
Child’s name
Quote
Family background
Life in the camp or in
hiding
Circumstances of
death or release
Paraphrase
Summary
What impact did Anne Frank have
on the lives of others?
What impact did have on Anne Frank
the lives of others?
Support Page_____
Topics
Summary
Details
Find evidence to support your
thesis
Anne Frank