
The boy in the striped pajamas
After returning from school one day, Bruno learns that he has to leave Berlin because his father was promoted in his job. The latter, a Nazi officer observed by Adolf Hitler, is sent to Poland to run an extermination camp: Auschwitz.
The whole family has to move to Poland. Bruno is very sad because he has to leave his friends, his house that he loves so much, as well as Berlin. Arrived at his new home, Bruno only has one wish: to return. The new house is sad and gloomy, and he gets bored ... until the day he sees something strange, behind a thick forest. He sees cabins, dusty dirt, soldiers, but even strangers: people who are dressed in the same way: striped pajamas. Soon after, driven by his curiosity and his ardent desire for exploration, Bruno will escape the vigilance of his parents, cross the great forest and go to the camp. As he approached the barbed wire fence, he encountered a Jewish boy of eight, like him, named Shmuel, and despite the barbed wire fence that separates them, dialogue is born, before giving way to an unbreakable friendship ...
I have always been curious about the period of the Second World War, which is why the Jewish people had to go through.
Because they were cheated and tortured, I can not imagine what the women and children had to experience.

Many may see it as something perverted I do not know, sometimes I think about how God allowed that, why? Why so much madness and evil in the world? if only we all thought the same way to protect one another from taking care of ourselves as brothers in Christ, where there would be no murders, rapes, kidnappings, mutilations, etc.
If world peace depended on my life, where a child is not at risk of anything, I would give it.
Every day there are so many things in the world, and the more advanced we are in technology, the less attention we pay to what happens around us.
We are no longer in those times where you worried about your neighbor.
The holocaust is a word of Greek origin meaning, sacrifice by fire.
![]()
Concentration camps Nazi
concentration camps are large detention centers created by the Third Reich from 1933 until the end of World War II, for interns, to exploit the labor force and to kill political opponents, residents of a conquered country, ethnic groups or specific religious, etc. It is the detainees who are forced to build these camps, the victims work in inhumane conditions, often leaving their lives there. The Third Reich used concentration camps, such as Dachau or Buchenwald, to eliminate and terrorize political opponents of the regime, and then intern Jews, Gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals and "social elements" such as criminals, vagabonds, etc.