Follow the news from FHAO sophomore English classes at Palo Alto High School.
Community Book Event
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Last Word.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Music in the Holocaust
The audience didn't know much about Holocaust music when the presentation began. We first learned about how Jews in concentration camps got the chance to compose music: The ideal concentration camp, the fortress of Terezin. The world was told that Hitler had set aside a town for Jews in order to be protected from the dangers of war. This town, built in the city-fortress of Terezin, was the only camp opened to the Red Cross during the war. Prisoners were shipped there, and it produced several propoganda films during the war showing prisoners splashing in a nearby lake, apparently having fun. When the Red Cross came to visit, the storefronts were filled with bread and candies and other goods. The Red Cross concluded that the Nazis were treating the Jews of Terazine well, and were therefore treating the Jews of Austerwitz and Birknau and the other camps just as well.
In fact, the prisoners of Terazine were shipped off to be gassed after they were no longer needed. Hans Krasa and Victor Ullmann, the composers of the two music pieces that we listened to, were both murdered at the other death camps.
At the camps, to further the illusion that it was a place where prisoners were treated well, Jews were permitted and ordered to compose music. There were enough musicians for two full orchestras in Terezin. At the beginning of the war, musical instruments were not allowed in camps, so musicians would break down their instruments into component parts and hide those in their clothing. Later in the war, the ban on instruments was relaxed.
When we had learned the background of the composition of the music, we turned down the lights and listened to a piece by Hans Krasa. I don't know the name of the piece, but here is what I have in my notes: It begins with a single cellow, playing slow and low, sadly. A violin begins to play, matching the mood but not the melody, playing at a much higher pitch. They go on in this manner, and then two more violins begin, playing the same notes at different octaves at the same time. The doubled melody rises and falls against the slow cellow and the high violin. Suddenly the doubled strings are silent, and there is a section where violins are plucked rhythmically. cautiously, as a single high thread is played by the first violin. Then a violin plays boldly, almost triumphantly in counterpoint to the mood of the rest of the piece, and is quickly silenced.
One member of the audience thought that the rhythmic, soft plucking reminded him of footsteps tiptoeing around, trying not to draw attention. "As long as food was coming that day and no one was being threatened, then it was a good day." I thought that each string represented a different prisoner's story, and that the doubled strings were the story of a boy and his father, or a girl and her mother staying together through the war, only to be killed before the end later.
The presentation was done well, and the audience was interested the whole time. I learned a lot, and so did everyone else.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Samuel Bak
Last period of work
At the event, there will be photographers and a student with a video recorder, and the post-event team will use them to create a documentary of the entire project. The six bloggers will also cover each session and write about them.
Monday, March 21, 2011
Holocaust Denial
I came across an interesting article which takes a nicely sized sledgehammer to that position.
"Starting in 1942, the Jews began circulating rumors that they were all being killed. These rumors filtered through various news agencies, from various sources.
By 1945, the Jews had forged tens of thousands of Nazi documents, all "proving" that the Nazis had committed mass murder. The Jews invented the whole thing in a whirlwind effort. They invented the places where the gassings took place. They researched and invented the techniques that were used. They forged photographs and wove them into the documentary record.
Their Jewish chemists figured out which perfectly ordinary buildings would be palmed off as gas chambers. They forged reports of how well the gassing operations were going. They forged reports to Hitler saying that the Eastern territories were free of Jews.
They forged inventories of the morgues, saying there were showerheads and gas-tight doors in them. They forged the whole story about SS guards being taken to a special camp to get them used to the idea of killing Jews.
Everything, every bit of it, forged.
Somehow the Jews got their Jew agents to be there when this forged evidence was presented to Hoess and Broad and Kremer and all the dozens of Nazis tried in 1945 and 1946. All of them must have had the same initial reaction: "what!? I never wrote that!?" but the Jew agents, of course, slapped them around a bit until they admitted it was true. And the Jew agents were very good, because every single one of them admitted that it was true. Those agents must have been quite good at making Nazis admit things, because a lot of those Nazis were seasoned military men. Where'd they hire those agents from?
They found a few thousand Jews who were willing to lie through their teeth and say that Auschwitz was an extermination camp, not a concentration camp. They must have held a big meeting, gathered all the survivors together, and briefed them. "OK," the Head Jew would have said, "repeat after me: Auschwitz was not a nice place to live. You did not go swimming at Auschwitz. Auschwitz used its morgues to gas people. In the summer of 1944 they burned bodies in ditches. Everyone on the left, you actually saw people being led to the gas chambers. You on the right, you did not, but you heard a lot about it." And so on."
-http://www.holocaust-history.org/~jamie/the-hoax.shtml
Friday, March 18, 2011
Our Progress in Pictures
First of all, this is out teacher Mr. Cohen. He's the main organizer for the event, and in charge of making sure we do all our work!
Then there is us, the period 1 students, always hard at work in preparation for the event (which is in a mere week!).
...well, unless we're looking at pictures in food blogs (how can you blame us!).
Anyways, in preparation for the Night Event, which will be held at Paly next Wednesday, March 23, the class has been divided into groups with different roles for the event. Below we have some group facilitators, the ever so essential heart and soul of the event. They will be holding discussions that will not only tackle issues mentioned in Night, but also ones dealing with the Holocaust and Elie Wiesel's life.
Along with the group facilitators, we also have a group of people making posters, opening and closing speakers, program designers, event designers, and more. We even have a documentary in the making. That's pretty exciting!
Basically, we're all working extremely hard to make the Night event a success (and the work doesn't end it class (well, at least for me) evidenced by me writing this blog on a Friday night (though it was my choice)).
I hope you are planning on attending the Night event next Wednesday, March 23, from 6:30 to 8:30 P.M at the Paly library and selected classrooms. While this event should be fun, it will also be extremely intellectually stimulating (and even a teeny bit mind boggling!).
Come with knowledge about the book Night and an open mind. We look forward to seeing you there!
Silence Isn't Always Golden
What we're doing
Life After Night
Discussion topics
Judgement and Justice
Samuel Bak Paintings
After searching up some other art work of his, I found a site that lined up his paintings and I noticed that every single person had the same look and posture of defeat: head down, back bent forward, and head in hand. The backgrounds are nothing alike, but the same message seems to come up. I have little experience with art that I wouldn't be able to tell you what it means, but I hope to better understand it soon.
Comparisons
Also, I recently read One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch by Alexander Solzhenitsyn. That book focused on the life of an inmate in a soviet work camp. I was struck by both the similarity and the drastic differences found in these camps. In Night, Eliezer travels throughout a system of camps, all of which, despite their common ideas, differ greatly in the severity of punishments and amount of freedom. This is similar to the disparity between the camps run by the Soviet Union. Some of the Nazi's camps are "death camps", where the primary goal is to eliminate the Jewish race, while others are "work camps". The Soviet's camps, on the other hand, were meant to punish political prisoners, but not necessarily to kill them. On top of the intense work involved, prisoners in the Russian camps also had to deal with the intense weather often present in Siberia. It was fascinating to me that there was so much similarity between the camps, yet also such disparity.
Today in the Lab
The Event is Approaching...
Monday, March 14, 2011
Resistance
While rereading the first few chapters of Night, I noticed that the Germans were met with surprisingly little resistance in their occupation, then deportation of Weisel's community. Before the Germans even arrived, the people of the community felt that they would never arrive at their homes, that the Germans would be sated somehow by taking Budapest. A faceless member of Weisel's community says "The Germans won't get as far as this. They'll stay in Budapest. There are strategic and political reasons..." And three days later, the German military had arrived in the town of Sighet.
Still the community continued to delude themselves. Even after the Jewish were banned from cafes, train stations, and resturaunts, even after the yellow stars were issued, the Jews of Sighet continued to be optimistic. The attitude of Sighet is similar to that of the world community. While Hitler began rearming Germany and preparing for war, the rest of the world did nothing. When Germany invaded the Rhineland, it met with little or no military opposition. Why is it that the Germans were able to do so much with so little resistance? Perhaps the world was still reeling from the horrors of the first world war. Perhaps people really believed that Hitler would stop before he actually harmed them. What were the effects of religion? The town elders preached the virtue of "Never lose[ing] faith, even when the sword hangs over your head". Who or what is responsible for the lack of resistance?