Upload
sydney-robinson
View
213
Download
1
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
PowerPoint Presentation
TuesdayOctober 28, 2014Pick up the new vocab and class work!Take out your notebooksAnd take everything else off of your desks.RemindersOffice hours: Mondays 2:30-3:30Thursdays 2:30-3:00
Vocab homework is due every WednesdayClass ObjectivesCompare and contrast a Hollywood produced miniseries about the Holocaust to actual footage from the war.Language ObjectivesDefine and identify parts of speech for vocab week three words Thoroughly and accurately answer the reflection questions on Band of Brothers and Frontline footageUtilize academic vocabulary to answer Holocaust footage critical thinking questions AgendaGuided NotesBand of Brothers FootageFrontline FootageReflection WorksheetVocab Week 3 Words: Page 41 Vocab Week 3 HW: Page 42Part of Speech:
AdjectiveKnown widely, usually unfavorablyDefinition:Gang members are often notorious for the terror they cause. Notorious
Part of Speech:
VerbTo verbally assaultDefinition:Tyra harangued Patrick so badly that he was petrified.Harangue
Part of Speech:
AdjectiveOf or relating to death or hellDefinition:The German officers treated the Jews with infernal disrespect.Infernal
Part of Speech:
NounA line of waiting peopleDefinition:The people in the queue were becoming impatientbecause they had to wait for so long.Queue
Part of Speech:
AdjectiveWithout intelligence; Brutal; InhumanDefinition:The Nazis in Germany during WWII are often considered bestial because of the way they treated their Jewish prisoners.Bestial
Part of Speech:
NounThe state or condition of having been forgottenDefinition:The rescued Jewish prisoners from World War II wished their memories from the camps would disappear into oblivion.Oblivion
Part of Speech:
VerbTo make rigid, lifeless or inactiveDefinition:The boy was rendered incapable of standing after his brother petrified him. Petrify
The Holocaust:Lets review your vocab homework:
Due WEDNESDAY!Now We have thoroughly explored the bystander theory in small situations where there are less than a hundred people involved.
Now, we will see what happened when the bystander theory goes into effect around the world. The Holocaust: a Brief HistoryToday, we will begin guided notes on the Holocaust.
But FIRST !Please update your table of contents and title page 39
The Holocaust: A KWLWhat Ive Learned:We will return to this section once our basic study of the Holocaust is complete!The Holocaust:Update your table of contents and title page 40:
The Holocaust: A Brief History Guided NotesThe history The Holocaust was the
systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators.systematic: of or relating to a system
bureaucratic: involving the government
state-sponsored: paid for by the state
persecution: the act of harassing or punishing*Vocabulary The history Holocaust: A word of Greek origin meaning sacrifice by fire
The history The Nazis came to power in Germany in January 1933
They believed that Germans were racially superiorThey also believed that the Jews were inferiorNazis saw Jews as an alien threat to the so-called German racial community. The history In 1933, the Jewish population stood at over 9 million people.
By 1945, the Germans had killed two out of every three European Jews.
The history In the early years, the Nazi regime created concentration camps where they would hide real and ideological opponents.
The history Between 1939 and 1941, Germany established an empire across Europe.
Brutal war engaged between 1941 and 1945.
The history Allied forces including the US, moved across Europe in a series of offenses against the German army. This is when the Nazi camps began the death marches, uprooting their dying prisoners across Europe to escape capture.
The history The marches continued until May 7, 1945.
It is on this day that the German armed forces surrendered unconditionally to the Allies. The history After the war was declared over, the prisoners who survived went to displaced persons camps (DP Camps)
The last DP camp closed in 1957.
The history Go back to your KWL!!
What Ive Learned:Write down something you were reminded of or learned during todays class.
Seniors Facing History Europe TripSeniors Facing History Europe Trip
Update your table of contents (page 41)Holocaust Footage ReflectionsNow We are going to watch a clip from the HBO miniseries, Band of Brothers where the American troops are coming in to release the prisoners of a concentration camp, presumably in 1945.*Preview the Questions for Band of Brothers now!Band of BrothersBand of Brothers is a 10-part miniseries produced by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks for HBO.The miniseries follows Easy Company, an army unit during World War II, from their initial training at Camp Toccoa to the conclusion of the war.The series is based on the book written by the late Stephen E Ambrose.
ReflectionsWhat struck you most about this footage?
Now We are going to watch a clip from the Frontline Series called, Memory from the Camps.*Preview the Questions for the Frontline Clip now!Frontline, Memory of the Camps75 years ago, in the spring of 1945, Allied forces liberating Europe found evidence of atrocities which have tortured the world's conscience ever since. As the troops entered the German concentration camps, they made a systematic film record of what they saw.
ReflectionsCompare the two segments. Find the similarities between the two segments.
Contrast the two segments. Find the differences between the two segments.
ReflectionsElie WieselThe novel we are about to read is one mans account of the Holocaust.
In order to better understand his point of view, we will learn a little about him first.Update your table of contents and title page 44:Elie Wiesel: Bio NotesEarly LifeElie was born in Sighet, Romania,on September 30, 1928
He had three sisters.His father ran a grocery store.His family was Jewish and their faith played an important role in their lives.
Typical Home in Sighet
Town of Sighet
Elies Family
World War IIHis town of Sighet was added to Hungary in 1940.In 1944, the Jewish community in Sighet was deported (sent against their will) to Auschwitz, one of the Nazi concentration camps.Wiesel was 15 years old when he and his family were deported.He spent a year at Auschwitz and Buchenwald before American troops freed the prisoners in 1945.
Empty Streets of Sighet After Deportation of JewsHungarian Jews Arrive at Auschwitz
One of Many Piles of Bone and Ashes Found at Buchenwald
Prisoners in the Barracks at Buchenwald
Child Survivors Leave Buchenwald
AuschwitzThe Black Wall, between cell blocks in Auschwitz where executions of inmates took place.
Suitcases that belonged to people deported to the Auschwitz camp.
Hair of female prisoners, prepared for shipment to Germany
Examination of Auschwitz camp survivors
Auschwitz camp barracks
Wiesel After WWIIPlaced in a French orphanageAttended college at the Sorbonne, a renowned university in ParisBecame a journalist, writing for French and Israeli papersJewish Orphans in France
In the United StatesElie moved to New York in 1955
Initially kept silent about his experiences in the death camps
Was convinced to write about the Holocaust
He wrote Night first in Yiddish then in French
The book was first published as La Nuit in 1958 Over his career, he has written over 40 books
Married writer Marion Ester Rose, also a survivor of the Holocaust, in 1969
Given the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 for speaking out against violence and racism
He is a retired Professor of Humanities at Boston University today
In the United StatesElie and His Family in 1984
Elies family treePlease update page 45 in your table of contents:Elies Father
CHLOMO
Elies Mother
Elies Oldest Sister:Hilda
Elies Younger Sister:Tziapora
Elies Older Sister:
Beatrice
Elie: (full name)
Eliezer Wiesel
66Important Jewish VocabularyUpdate your table of contents and open up your notebooks to page 46. Title this page, Night Chapter 1 Vocabulary: Words You Should KnowTorah Hebrew BibleTalmud a collection of teachings of early rabbisHasidism movement of Orthodox JudaismCabbala mystical commentary on the Torah studied by Jewish scholars Night Chapter 1 Vocabulary: Words You Should KnowRosh Hashanah Jewish new yearYom Kippur holiest day of the Jewish calendar in which every individual is judged by GodPassover eight-day celebration of the freeing of the Jewish people from slavery in EgyptSynagogue Jewish house of worship and study Saturday Jewish day of rest Night Chapter 1 Vocabulary: Words You Should KnowGestapo: German Secret State Police, part of the SS known for its tactics of terrorismRed Army: Russian army who fought against the Germans in WWIIFascism: oppressive form of government ruled by a dictator that uses terror and censorship to maintain control and powerBoche: slang for German soldierImportant Jewish VocabularyPlease affix these notes into your notebook.