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What are your reasons for visiting / not visiting?

2006-08-12 17:53:49 · 19 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

19 answers

as a historian, yes. as a person, absolutely yes, and i bet i'd take away hope and hate and an incredible respect for those who survived that horror and for those who didn't. it would be an experience that would probably make my others look downright small, rendering me unable to look at anything the same way again.

hm. tangent. sorry.

2006-08-12 18:00:08 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think edification in such matters is absolutely essential in order to prevent these atrocities from ever occurring again. Those who visit concentration camps would be able to grasp and comprehend, to a certain extent, the deplorable conditions imposed upon a sub-group of people. Surveyors, who have visited the sites and researched the transgressions, would become more wary of the current U.S. legislation, which maintains a stance comparable to that of Nazi Germany; the Patriot Act, Echelon, Abu Ghraib, Bush's Legislation, etc. They would also be more liable to avert such occurrences on a global scale, such as the recent genocides in Rwanda and Sudan.

2006-08-12 18:15:36 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would absolutely love to visit a concentration camp. I am a history major in college right now so something like that would be right up my alley. I think it would be a very emotional experience, but I think it is important for people to see first hand what can happen when one group of people lets the hate they feel for another group of people get so out of control.

2006-08-12 18:00:37 · answer #3 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

I would visit one of the ones in Germany, if offerred the chance, though I would not make a special visit on my own for this.

I would not go because there are a lot of things I want to do, and places I want to go, with my family before that, but I can not deny the force of history those places must hold. I can't imagine anyone who would walk under those gates and then back out would ever countenance such hatred or violence again.

2006-08-12 17:57:58 · answer #4 · answered by But why is the rum always gone? 6 · 0 0

I would absolutely love to visit a concentration camp. I have always loved the history of WWII. My grandfather and all of my great uncles were pilots in the Luftwaffe- but that was back when my family was still in Germany.

2006-08-12 18:06:25 · answer #5 · answered by playdoh1986 6 · 0 0

approximately as lots risk as under ice-diving interior the Sahara wasteland in midsummer. a million- Hitler in no way visited a concentration camp. For all functional purposes, a concentration camp became a rubbish facility. Why on earth would he decide for to work out or inspect in man or woman some thing like that? aside from that extremely obtrusive certainty, it became a hush-hush situation. no longer some thing to sell widely to the final public. traveling a camp would draw lots undesirable interest to their life. The life of camps became no longer thoroughly hidden from the final public. What the surely purpose became, became hidden from the wide-unfold public. Hitler became saved as much as possible 'out of the loop'. All he needed became somebody to administration it (Himmler, who delegated it to Eichmann, a particularly unknown no person). The no person would record to somebody, the somebody to the Fuhrer. Verbal, everywhere possible. 2- protection around Hitler became tight. VERY tight. you have (in all probability) no theory how tight. He became the suitable risk-free man or woman of that element interior the worldwide. it is between the justifications why so few tries to homicide him have been made and non succeeded. it is incredibly unthinkable, even in a made up tale, he would 'bump with out observe' into somebody. the protection zone around him became numerous hundred meter huge. image a circle with a diameter of 500 meter wherein each and every thing would be searched till now hand.

2016-11-04 11:36:13 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes l would visit one.My Nana was in a concentration camp and she lost some relatives while they were in concentration camps.My Nana still has nightmares about it,so l think l would go,so l could understand her better.My Nana wants to take me to Poland before she dies so l can really understand.

2006-08-12 21:04:18 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

well, my country Nepal is finally coming out of a bloody insurgency that lasted for 10 years. The insurgents still have labor/concentration camps in their strongholds. I have come across such camps and they are simply dreadful. I wouldnt want to visit again!

2006-08-12 17:59:16 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You mean the concentration camps that Germans and Italians and Asians were confined at in the United States during WWII?

2006-08-12 17:57:08 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have been to a couple of concentration camps. One was in Austria it was so sad the thing that people did to other people. The other was in Poland. I did a couple of Contiki tours one around Europe and the other around Norway and Russia and into Germany and Poland. They show you how luck we are to live in a free country like Australia or America

2006-08-12 18:04:48 · answer #10 · answered by MJane21 5 · 0 0

No. I read Anne Frank's diaries as a child. I've filled my head with so many tales of war and the consent ration camps, I'm sick of it. I send a silent prayer to all those poor people and concentrate on wishing for peace (yeah, I know, I'm a dreamer).

2006-08-12 17:57:43 · answer #11 · answered by R. F 3 · 1 0

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