Preview

Sofia Auschwitz Short Story

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1404 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Sofia Auschwitz Short Story
Auschwitz Sofia Smirnov had her brown hair cut short. She was suffering through the pain in her stomach she called hunger. She waited in line for her soup. She waited near the back of the line so she could get the sausage at the bottom. She made a silent prayer to just be able to make it through the day. Sofia tried not to look desperate as she saw the watery liquid being poured into bowls, if she seemed desperate the nazis would skip her or even kill her. It had been two days since they killed a man at roll call, Sofia figured they were getting bored. Her stomach growled and then her heart sank a nazi stopped walking and stood next to her. She kept looking forward her stomach hurting more from the knot that was now forming. She felt like she was going to throw up but her stomach was empty. Sofias face kept perfectly straight looking like the other walking corpses in front of her. …show more content…
The nazi smiled and dumped the watery soup in her bowl, she was glad to see a tiny piece of sausage land in the bowl. She followed the rest of the group to the barracks she figured the last person was getting their soup. “Oh I’m sorry I think we are all out,” the nazi mocked. Sofia heard sobs and then the nazi swore before laughing. Suddenly a shot rang out and Sofia winced at the noise. One of the nazis swore loudly. “Did you see that shot, look at his head that's so disgusting,” one of the nazis said laughing. Sofia couldn't understand how a human could commit to this. The sick feeling of starving people and killing them if their day didn't go the way it was supposed to. She wondered if they enjoyed it. She wolfed down the soup once inside the barracks and tried to listen to the whispering between a couple jews. She could hear the nazis struggling to lift the body, a couple laughed when they dropped it. A nazi came into the barracks and pointed at Sofia and a younger girl Sofia knew as

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    “Are you sure those dirty Jews didn't get in?”, a Nazi said,as a joke, and we heard Abelard nervously laugh.…

    • 498 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Gerda Weismann remembers when the war started. She heard shooting coming coming from the roof. Her family moved into the basement of their home to hide. There was no water, electricity, heating, or air conditioning. Her brother was forced into a labor camp shortly after the war started. Gerda says the worst day of her life was on June 28th 1942, it was the last day she saw her father. When she was taken to a concentration camp her and her mom were separated. She was on a truck leaving her mother and she jumped off. The soldiers put her back on the truck and told her she was too young to die. Gerda was taken to a slave labor camp where she got very sick. The woman who ran the camp saved Gerda’s life by making her work even though she was sick.…

    • 358 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eva Cooper Research Paper

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages

    There were bombs flying all over the place, & Eva’s family couldn’t tell who was shooting. Eva’s family tried to create a shelter.Eva’s family kept on hearing rumors that the allies were getting closer. But “closer” was not here and it was not over . Food became a big problem. Eva was extremely fussy(she used to smell everything before she put it in her mouth.) There were not a lot of choices. One time Eva's mother was working at the farm, and a chicken had laid an egg and , so she stole the egg. She made a made a small piece of yellow cake. Eva guesses that some flour had been available, but she needed the egg. Eva had always liked sweets,so that was very good. People would share pieces of bread or things like that with Eva’s family.Eva always liked Hungarian sausages, so her mother would cut one tiny slice of sausage and chop it up finely so there were many, many pieces , and she made a sandwhich with the little sausage. All the Jews that had been hiding eventually went back to Budapest, so did Eva’s family. But there was still a bunch of Germans hanging around there. At one point there was a firing line, the Jews were lined up to be shot. However a bomb was dropped…

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Germany defeated the French military in 1940 a number of different resistance groups formed to aid the freedom of both the French citizens and the French-Jewish population. Some groups were violent who aimed to kill the German occupiers. Others used non-violent means, broadcasting anti-German radio programs and published underground newspapers. These resisters were to be handed over to the Nazi’s and punished. In Charlotte Delbo’s U.S translated memoir, Auschwitz and After, published by Yale University Press in 1985, we see how Mrs. Delbo takes a stance against the German invasion and aims to protect the French population by producing leaflets. Other’s joined Delbo and her husbands’ side which resulted in the birth of the French-Resistance…

    • 366 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Stasiland Pracessay5

    • 1936 Words
    • 6 Pages

    1. FUNDER’S STASILAND ALSO DEMONSTRATES OTHER VICTIMS STORIES, AND HOW THEY WERE EQUALLY VANDALIZED BY THE MONSTER OF THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICS TORTURE AND STRICT RULES AND REGULATIONS, SUCH AS THE TALE OF JULIA BEHREND, A CHILD OF THE STASI REGIME WHO WAS ALSO PLAGUED BY THE BERLIN WALL TO THE HIGHEST DEGREE EVEN THOUGH SHE WAS BORN INTO THE GDR. MAKING HER A PURE CITIZEN. ( JULIA BEHREND, MIRIAM WEBER )…

    • 1936 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Treblinka Research Paper

    • 2361 Words
    • 10 Pages

    “News of the German defeats filled the Jewish prisoners with both hope and trepidation. Many feared that the SS would soon liquidate the camp and its remaining prisoners so that all evidence of their heinous crimes would be destroyed.”9 Those who were in the camp wanted a way to escape and tell someone of the war crimes that the German’s were committing. The revolt was staged by the “Organizing Committee,” which consisted of Dr. Julian Chorazycki, “camp elder” Marceli Galewski, former Czech army officer Zelo Bloch, Zev Kurland, and Jankiel Wiernik, a carpenter who worked in the extermination area.”10 Samuel was unaware that the staging of a revolt was about to occur. How Samuel found out was in a truly remarkable way. While he was stationed with an Austrian guard, and elderly man walks into the room he is in, already stripped down and about to be executed, pleaded out that there is a conspiracy being planned to escape, but the Austrian guard couldn’t understand him and proceeded to shoot the man in the head. Leading up the revolt, the committee was faced with a major setback. Chorazycki, who was charged with the task of acquiring arms from outside was caught by the deputy commandant and would eventually commit suicide to prevent any other information from escaping. After hearing news of a revolt in the Warsaw Ghetto from prisoners coming off the trains, their morale’s and…

    • 2361 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Holocaust was a very tragic and horrifying event in history that changed human minds forever. Millions of Jews died in this event, because of mass murders and death camps. Adolf Hitler was a very cruel, but persuasive leader of Germany. He turned many people against the Jewish by blaming the loss of World War I on them. Adolf started to send Jews to concentration and death camps, so Jews hid. Many Jews went into hiding, such as, Jeannine Burk. During her childhood she hid for two years from the Nazi. However, she hid by herself in a stranger’s house and didn’t receive attention and love. Jeannine had to stay away from her family, and the only friends she had were imaginary. She could only go to the backyard, and when the Nazi had marches…

    • 613 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After being in the Lutz ghetto for months, Opa Samuel was taken away because the SS are rounding up everyone that was at the hospital last night. Surely they will be sent to Auschwitz, a death camp. Suddenly the word is spread that there will be a surprise search for hidden children. They decide to hide their children in the cupboard and hope they won't be found. Before they line up they slap their cheeks and bite their lips to look healthy. When the officer walks up he sends both Gertrude and Bridget to the the trucks. Aunt leah runs up and says that she won't leave them. “Casually the officer raised his pistol and shot. First the two girls and then Aunt Leah. In the head”. (49) Mia runs forward and gets shot by the officer. Daniel and his…

    • 204 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    During the late 1930’s the world was contaminated by the Second World War and the Holocaust. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, Holocaust is defined as follows: “a sacrifice wholly consumed by fire.” During the Holocaust, the Nazis, under the command of Adolf Hitler, liquidated over six million Jews. There is one Jewish survivor whose story especially touched my heart and changed my attitude towards life for the better. This amazing woman is Krystyna Chiger. Krystyna and her family escaped the Nazi liquidation by living in sewers for fourteen months (qtd. in “The Girl in the Green Sweater” 5). Accordingly, thorough assessments of my personal experiences according to the life lessons of Krystyna Chiger descriptively visualize the Holocaust and its everlasting impact on society.…

    • 1240 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Thornton heavily emphasizes the image of the Holocaust during Carlos’ stay at Amos and Sara’s refuge. Amos shares his and Sara’s experiences in Auschwitz with Carlos through his “...picture of people with no hair who looked like skeletons...either crying or laughing.” (78) The skeletons in the photograph, Amos and Sara, were liberated from the concentration camp and survived by maintaining hope in a future despite all the horrors that surrounded them. Sasha, the daughter of a friend of Amos and Sara’s, has her story told as well by Amos who explains that she “...offended a guard by asking for something to drink when she had a fever. He cut out her tongue with a bayonet and threw it in a refuse heap where a rat appeared to run off with it to his burrow.” (78) She still held onto hope despite the torture, pain, possibility of death, and eventual muteness. Sara, Amos, and Sasha were some of the few who survived the Holocaust with their hope and belief intact. They held onto their hope following the nightmare they were forced to live through and continued to maintain it throughout their lives thus giving them meaning and reason to live.…

    • 896 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Plot * Liesel, her mother and her brother Werner are all travelling on a train, to greet Werner’s and Liesels foster parents. * Liesel, illiterate has a dream o Adolf Hitler and speaks to him in broken German. * As she is half awake, Liesels brother dies, and there were two Nazi soldiers who argue on weather they leave the body there or take it with them. * Both Liesel and her mother are traumatized by his sudden death and 2 days later he is buried. * After the ceremony finishes Liesel digs at his grave but is dragged away by her mother, but before getting on another train Liesel steals a book she is unable to even read the title of. * She is taken to a place in Munich called Himmel -"Heaven" to meet Rosa and Hans Hubermann, her foster parents. * She refuses to meet or get out of the car with her suitcase that only contains her clothes and the book she stole from her brother’s gravesite. * The only person that manages to get her out of the care is her foster father. * Liesel feels abandoned by her mother, but understands that it’s better for her to live there and be protected from the poverty; she also learns that her father was a communist, but she doesn’t yet know the meaning of that word. * Liesels foster mother acts harshly upon her and calls her a "pig girl" when she refuses to bathe, but claims to loves her. * Her foster father, Hans develops a closer relationship with her and teaches her how to roll cigarettes. she starts calling them "mama" and "papa" * Liesel got terrible nightmares about her brother the first few months and was accompanied by Hans, who she kept the book hidden from. * She kept the book as a symbol reminding her the last time she saw her brother, and the last time she saw her mother. * Liesel is put in school but has to stay with a much younger grade, just learning the alphabet. When she turns ten she joins the Hitler Youth. * Liesel makes a friend names Rudy who…

    • 1453 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Night by Elie Wiesel

    • 1383 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The Nazi’s were ruthless executioners, although, when the Nazi’s first came to Sighet they were rather reassuring. They were housed in local homes and were welcomed into the Kahn’s, Elie’s neighbor, home. The Germans were seemingly polite and charming to their hosts, and, on some occasions, smiled at them. Then on the 7th day of Passover, the German’s turned on the Jews and arrested the Jewish leaders of their community. They forced the remaining people in the community to stay in their homes for three days. If they left, the penalty was death. Moishe the Beadle had warned the town’s people of this. He had told them stories about the horrors the Germans had committed, of being taken away into a forest and barely escaping death. Yet, when he came back to Sighet, no one believed him and disregarded his warnings. He had come running to Elie’s house and reminded them that he had warned them, and then left without a response. That same day, the Hungarian police burst unexpectedly into every Jewish home. They were told that Jewish people could no longer possess gold, jewelry, or any valuables. In the following days their merciless attacks on children, women, and the elderly fueled everyone’s anger. They were promptly forced to leave their ghetto to go to the small ghetto, and from there they were herded into cattle cars. There were at least 80 people per car, and the conditions of the cars…

    • 1383 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Auschwitz Was an extermination camp or what people call concentration camps, concentration camps was a place where the Nazies held Jews, gypsies, and, gays. Auschwitz killed many people even children. To support my claim from an article called 2 Teenagers Arrested for Theft of Auschwitz Artifacts. Jacob Koffler says “More than 1 million people, mostly Jews, as well as gay people and gypsies, were killed at Auschwitz between 1940 and 1945. In 1947, the site was converted to a museum and saw more than 1.2 million visitors in 2012.” Auschwitz was the largest concentration camp that the nazies usesed in WW ll but later on after the war two teenagers was convicted of stealing from…

    • 347 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    All But My Life Analysis

    • 1298 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The desire for power, fear, and self-preservation can cause people to change in ways one could not imagine. In the story, Night by Elie Wiesel, and Gerda Weissman Klein’s All But My Life, the authors share their tragic experiences from their times in Nazi concentration camps. In Addition, Klein’s All But My Life shows her experience in many different concentration camps for three years and how differently female inmates were treated than male. In Wiesel’s Night, he discusses his experience of being sent to Auschwitz along with his father for a year and how the tragedies he endured transformed his character. In Addition, Klein’s All But My Life shows her experience in many different concentration camps for three years and how differently female…

    • 1298 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    The rumbling of empty stomachs filled the silent air, invading the little space we had. Trying to take my mind off my thoughts, I focused on seeing my family again, wondering whether they managed to escape. I had heard stories of what had happened to captured Jews in Germany, but that's all I thought they were. Stories. A vision of a nightmare, fuelled by fear of the unknown. Unfortunately, judging from the events of today, they seemed all too true. Suddenly, a whistle blasted, and the train lurched forward. Terror shot through my veins as we left Szczebrzeszyn, heading towards our inevitable future. My bottom lip quivered as I stood gazing into the darkness, unable to prevent the tears that dripped down my face. I stayed to myself throughout the journey, as did everyone else. The amount of oxygen in the air made me feel light-headed, as we continued to stand, crowded together like cattle. Days passed before we finally arrived. The journey was mostly a blur. I hadn't eaten or drunken since stepping into the boxcar, and I knew I would die if I went a few more days without water. The only thing that had kept me going was the thought of seeing my family…

    • 1837 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics