Thursday, December 11, 2014

Behind the Bedroom Wall |Blog #5|

Summary:
Now finished with Behind the Bedroom Wall Korinna still debating whether to trust Rita, report her parent's and trust any other Nazi member and is facing the Jew problem also.  She starts to switch from a Loyal German to a person who has sympathy for Rachel's conditions behind the wall of Korinna's bedroom.  She learns all about Ruth, Rachel's older sister and Rachel's old house.  Instead of ignoring the little girl she starts to open her eyes wide and see what Jews are going through.  Then one day the Gestapo barge in the Rehme's house and destroy everything trying to find any Jews but leave anything involved with Hitler, like for example his portrait.  Not finding anything, Hans (Rita's older brother) is angry and nearly kicks Korinna's kitten for Korinna's confession on why there was a missing page on her journal.  After the Gestapo leave the Rehme's make a choice.  With that it ends.

I had a question on the part where the Gestapo did NOT break the portrait of Hitler.  This would be smart if the upstander actually had a hidden room behind the portrait.  If the Gestapo really do appreciate Hitler then there is a really good chance that the Rehme's would be able to keep the Krugmann's in a 60% chance of safe.  Also I asked myself, Couldn't they just break the portrait just to make sure the Rehme's aren't hiding anything behind, because if they are then that is a smart plan.  Especially to the fact that Hans and the rest did not touch the picture?  Of course the Rehme's couldn't think of that since they never have been untrusted by the Gestapo and the Gestapo ruining their home.

Reading Strategy:
While I was reading the book  Behind the Bedroom Wall I was really interested in the conflict.  There are some books that only one conflict but this book had around 3 or more.  First conflict was that Korinna had to face her parent's helping Jews, since Korinna is more of a loyal German.  Another is self conflict, she couldn't decided whether to report her parent's or not, or trust her friends and other Nazi members.  Then there was the fact that people were getting suspicious of her.  Her Jungmadel leaders were watching her especially the one who slapped her.  Then there was the ending.  It left with a cliff hanger.  The conflict was still there but a new one was rising.  There was so many of them I had a hard time trying to keep up.  Throughout half of the book Korinna was looking at her parents as enemies.  She was more entranced with the Nazi and Adolf Hitler that she didn't see how Jews were actually feeling and being treated.  She wanted to report her parents before anyone else does report her and her parents.  This meant she wanted to still be a loyal German than be mistaken as a traitor.  Then she wrote something in her black notebook that could have given some one a clue to what is happening.  Rita her best friend found this and who knows maybe even turned her back away from Korinna.  There's so much conflict in this book that just leads to, too many questions.

Another thing is.  If I were to compare the Jews on a tense situation on being found to the "today world" I would compare them to immigrants hiding in cars while crossing the border with the help of american citizens.  I mean if you think about it, a jew hiding in a little room and an immigrant hiding under the car seat or wherever they can hide and next thing you know the Nazi and the Border police check.  They are so near the Jew and immigrant that they start to become tense and uneasy.  A jew's heart would start pounding as if it is about to jump out of it's chest and an immigrant would be the same.  Course the immigrants goal is to cross to the country they want to live in without being caught, illegally.  A Jew's goal is to hide somewhere safe from the Nazi without also being caught and trying to get to another place safe untill they finally survive.  I just think that when the predator is near it's prey, you know the prey would start panicking thinking if they are about to get caught and their whole world would tumble into pieces.  I just think that in that situation of being caught is the same as an immigrant and a jew when the authority and Nazi are near.  That's just my connection.

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Behind the Bedroom Wall




So far in the book Behind the Bedroom Wall a girl named Korinna Rehme who is a member of the Hitler Youth or the Jungmadel is taught to hate Jews and report them. But she then learns her mother and father are sheltering Jews and acting as if they are "true Germans". This all takes place in 1942. As Korinna is slowly progressing that Jews are in her home, her friend Rita and her Jungmadel leaders are starting to get suspicious for her especially for not attending 2 meetings for being "sick". Korinna is also in a tight situation and having a man vs. self conflict whether to report her parent's as enemies of Germany and whether to trust her best friend Rita and anyone else who is involved in the Nazi.

Behind the Bedroom Wall has so many parts that what to make you shake and nearly scream from the suspense. One of the interesting parts is once Rita reads a statement Korinna wrote about her parent's. Rita ask Korinna why she was writing it. Korinna only responds that it was because she was angry. Rita only replies saying she won't tell no one and her secret is kept with her but looks at the wardrobe for a long time, where the Jews are hiding (behind the wardrobe and behind Korinna's bedroom wall). I had a twisting feeling that Rita was only saying that to escape and tell some one especially her brother Hans who is a Gestapo officer. Another is while Korinna was sleeping the Gestapo police started to barge in her house searching for the Jews and not finding any. Hans was also involved in it making me think that Rita must've told her brother about what she read. What surprised me a lot in the plot is how everything is building up and getting it more complicated for Korinna to handle with the Jew situation. I think we're almost there in the climax making the book more exciting to read.









Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Holocaust Blog 12/3/14

After reading about bystanders and upstanders I believe many people stood by and watched the holocaust take place was because of fear.  Not everyone was brainwashed for hating Jews but they knew if they betrayed the Nazi and Hitler there would be a consequence.  Of course there was others who did sheltered Jews and when they were caught they would be killed or put in camps.  That made others fear of their lives being taken away and facing a group that has military weapons.  Other Germans took the risk to actually save Jews and I think the reason why is because they knew they were being killed and mistreated.  Unlike others who were brainwashed to say hurtful names to Jews they took the risk to shelter Jews knowing their life could be taken away.  What I would think I would have done is maybe take the risk of helping the Jews.  Even though there is much fear like being placed in camps and killed also being called a Jew lover or something like that.  Also if I was an upstander then I would take the non violent route.  I would listen to forbidden allied broadcast radios, and read or produce clandestine anti-Nazi newspaper.  Though I will of course need to act normal like all Germans so no one knows that I am hiding something from everyone.  Staying away from killing high ranking informers and trying to assassinate Adolf Hitler would at least help me be disguised as an Nazi follower.