Chapter 3 questions
•1.The ride was almost unbearable. Thirst was torturing all of the deportees, and the heat was tremendous. People were even having sexual intercourse in the midst of the darkness of the car.
2.The Hungarian interpreter told the Jewish deportees that they were under the authority of the German army. He also told them that all of their valuable possessions should be given up, and that anyone discovered to have kept something will be shot on the spot.
3.If someone is found to be missing, each and every one of the remaining Jews will be shot like dogs.
4.Madam Schachter was about 50-years-old, and was a quiet woman with tense, burning eyes. While in the cart, she began to lose her mind. She was constantly screaming that she saw a fire, a terrible fire. However, no one believed her and many of the men gagged her and tied her up so that she would cause anymore annoyance.
5.Madam Schachter scream “Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a Fire.” This meant that she was foreshadowing the horrible fates that awaited most of the Jewish prisoners at the concentration camp. Some how she knew about the burnings of the people, and she was warning everyone else in the cart.
6.Her screams shocked all of the other deportees. They trembled from it. People began to think she was crazy, and even went as far as to gag and tie her up.
7.They arrived at Auschwitz. The largest, deadliest concentration camp during the Holocaust.
8.There was a labor camp. Conditions were good. Families would not be split up. Only the young people would go to work in the factories. The old men and invalids would be kept occupied in the fields. The barometer of confidence for the Jews was soaring initially. The camp was a sudden release from the terrors of the previous nights.
9.Madam Schachter was still screaming of the fires and a German officer was called by the man I charge of their cart. He suggested that she be taken to the hospital, and the German officer told him that she will be going there shortly.
10.Through the windows they could see barbed wire. They saw a tall chimney in which flames were gushing out of. There was an abominable odor floating around in the air, which smelt of burnt flesh and bone.
11.An image that would represent this chapter would be one including a picture of Auschwitz, and the smoke coming from the chimneys of the crematories.
2.The Hungarian interpreter told the Jewish deportees that they were under the authority of the German army. He also told them that all of their valuable possessions should be given up, and that anyone discovered to have kept something will be shot on the spot.
3.If someone is found to be missing, each and every one of the remaining Jews will be shot like dogs.
4.Madam Schachter was about 50-years-old, and was a quiet woman with tense, burning eyes. While in the cart, she began to lose her mind. She was constantly screaming that she saw a fire, a terrible fire. However, no one believed her and many of the men gagged her and tied her up so that she would cause anymore annoyance.
5.Madam Schachter scream “Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a Fire.” This meant that she was foreshadowing the horrible fates that awaited most of the Jewish prisoners at the concentration camp. Some how she knew about the burnings of the people, and she was warning everyone else in the cart.
6.Her screams shocked all of the other deportees. They trembled from it. People began to think she was crazy, and even went as far as to gag and tie her up.
7.They arrived at Auschwitz. The largest, deadliest concentration camp during the Holocaust.
8.There was a labor camp. Conditions were good. Families would not be split up. Only the young people would go to work in the factories. The old men and invalids would be kept occupied in the fields. The barometer of confidence for the Jews was soaring initially. The camp was a sudden release from the terrors of the previous nights.
9.Madam Schachter was still screaming of the fires and a German officer was called by the man I charge of their cart. He suggested that she be taken to the hospital, and the German officer told him that she will be going there shortly.
10.Through the windows they could see barbed wire. They saw a tall chimney in which flames were gushing out of. There was an abominable odor floating around in the air, which smelt of burnt flesh and bone.
11.An image that would represent this chapter would be one including a picture of Auschwitz, and the smoke coming from the chimneys of the crematories.

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