



Prepara tus exámenes y mejora tus resultados gracias a la gran cantidad de recursos disponibles en Docsity
Gana puntos ayudando a otros estudiantes o consíguelos activando un Plan Premium
Prepara tus exámenes
Prepara tus exámenes y mejora tus resultados gracias a la gran cantidad de recursos disponibles en Docsity
Prepara tus exámenes con los documentos que comparten otros estudiantes como tú en Docsity
Encuentra los documentos específicos para los exámenes de tu universidad
Estudia con lecciones y exámenes resueltos basados en los programas académicos de las mejores universidades
Responde a preguntas de exámenes reales y pon a prueba tu preparación
Consigue puntos base para descargar
Gana puntos ayudando a otros estudiantes o consíguelos activando un Plan Premium
Comunidad
Pide ayuda a la comunidad y resuelve tus dudas de estudio
Ebooks gratuitos
Descarga nuestras guías gratuitas sobre técnicas de estudio, métodos para controlar la ansiedad y consejos para la tesis preparadas por los tutores de Docsity
crear un personaje y explicar desde su punto de vista el holocauto
Tipo: Ejercicios
1 / 7
Esta página no es visible en la vista previa
¡No te pierdas las partes importantes!




Presented by : Ian Sotomayor
Life in the Kraków Ghetto was extremely harsh, with severe food shortages, disease, overcrowding, and forced labor. In 1942, during the deportations carried out as part of the Nazi “Final Solution,” David’s mother and sister were sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where they did not survive. David and his father were forced into labor, and in 1943, when the ghetto was liquidated, many remaining Jews were deported to camps. David was eventually transported to Plaszow, a forced labor camp near Kraków, where prisoners worked under brutal conditions building roads and carrying heavy materials. Despite everything, David tried to survive and even shared small pieces of bread with weaker prisoners, understanding that surviving itself had become a form of resistance.
Forms of resistance during the Holocaust included armed uprisings such as the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, but also small daily acts of courage. David did not take part in an armed revolt, yet he resisted in quieter ways by sharing food with weaker prisoners, helping others remain standing during roll call, and refusing to lose hope. In January 1945, as Soviet forces advanced, many camps were evacuated and prisoners were forced on death marches. David survived and was liberated later that year by Soviet troops. When the war ended, he was 20 years old and had lost most of his family. After the war, he emigrated to Palestine, later the State of Israel, where he worked as a mechanic, carrying the memory of his parents and sister for the rest of his life.