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  • How did they survive?Was it harder for women? If so, how?
  • How were they impacted?What did they do after the war?
  • How did they survive?Was it harder for women? If so, how?
  • Prior to the war, women werealways portrayed as well-kept people, taking care of their appearances.However, once in the camps, they were transformed and robbed of any privilegesor aspects of civilisation. Once women were thrown out of their homes andforced to leave to face their ultimate death, many chose to take items such ashigh-heeled shoes or pieces of jewellery. This may have been as a result of theshock and purely something they took in panic, or maybe it was because whenthey died, this is how they wanted to leave the world, with an identity andtheir own pride.
  • How were they impacted?What did they do after the war?
  • After the war, the survivors hadthe daunting task of having to rebuild their lives from scratch, in order toeither try and escape from the fear of such events happening again, or to hidefrom any remaining 'enemies' they thought they might encounter if they stayedin the same location. With no financial support, and hardly any family members,if they were lucky enough to have any at all, many emigrated from Europe tostart over.
  • What vital roles did they play?What was the woman’s part in the Holocaust?
  • Women had to survive in any waythat they could whether this meant using their sexual persuasion to theiradvantage; to earn money or to gain food to support their family. Furthermore,women would use the last of their rouge as make up on their cheeks in order tosave them before selections at the camps. Hygiene was vital for survival, oneexample is the lice comb the women used to stop becoming infested with insectsto save them the pain of itchiness, which would cause even more torment.Moreover, women would wash their bodies and clothes in freezing cold waterthrough the rasping winter if it enabled them to keep clean. However not allwomen were given such a chance of water supply.
  • What vital roles did they play?What was the woman’s part in the Holocaust?
  • Men and women still lived theirlives in fear that their experiences would be repeated. The loss of theirfamilies and their loved ones was, and forever will be, the most traumatic andprominent event of their entire lives. Such tragedies caused many to lose thewill to live. The experiences of death and torture and the horrors of the deathcamps are still fresh in their minds.
  • During the holocaust, the malegender carried a more active role. Any risks to be taken were usually the maleduty. Forming resistances and groups that plotted against the Nazis would alsousually be the man's prerogative. If a family was to be arrested, the husband,or father, would usually be the first to be taken.
  • Such processes suggest that duringthe Holocaust, the woman was seen as a 'bonus' to arrest or torture, whereasfor a man, this was the necessity. Those lucky enough to not have been taken toa concentration camp would have probably stayed in hiding. It was, and stillis, the stereotype that a woman's role is to nurture the children and take careof the home. On a much larger scale, the holocaust meant that the woman'sresponsibility was to keep the family 'in line' or in a safe environment if herhusband was away.
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