8)
Dobry den!
I can’t believe I can say I have been studying abroad in the
Czech Republic for a little over a month. There are so many things I have done
and places I have seen yet so many more to do and places to see! Yesterday, we
woke up early on a beautiful Saturday morning to get ready for our next field
trip. The bus arrived at our dorms to pick us up at 6:30 a.m. so we could be on
our way. The bus ride was 4 hours long and consisted of my classmates and I
doing a lot of sleeping. I can say that not many of us are morning people but
being able to sleep on the bus makes up for it all. The place we went to is
Terezin. In our recent history classes, we had begun discussing the Holocaust
and what the Czech Republic was before it officially became the Czech Republic.
We knew that the field trip to Terezin wasn’t going to be about having fun as
it a grim part of the history here.
Terezin is
a concentration camp that was used by the Nazis. It was turned into a Jewish
ghetto during World War I where lots of Jewish people unfortunately passed away
or were killed. As we walked up to the sight, the first thing I saw was this.
A big cross was placed in front of a mass grave. When I
looked at the different stones, it saddened me to see only numbers instead of
names on them. Unfortunately, there was a fee if we wanted to take pictures
during the tour so I decided not to use a camera. Our tour guide was a young
woman who seemed passionate and very knowledgeable about the Terezin camp. She
began our tour and gave us information about the awful experiences Jewish
people had to go through. We walked through the reception area, where prisoners
had to check in. They lost their identity and received a number here. I felt
sad when I heard this. I began thinking how horrible it would be to have my
name stripped from me and only be recognized by a number throughout my life.
Throughout the tour we looked at the living conditions, which seemed
unbearable. There were 3 bunks on top of each other where several beings had to
sleep extremely close to each other. We learned they were given only small
portions of food each day and were put to labor for at least 12 hours of the
day. They were hardly able to shower and sometimes not shower at all. Jewish
people had it the worst of all. Some of the rooms in the camp did not have beds
at all and Jewish people were made to stand while they slept in a small crowded
room full of 70 people. Several rooms were filled up to even six times their
capacity.
An
experience I will not forget during the tour is walking through a tunnel, where
the victims had to walk through that would lead to their execution. It was a 5
to 8 minute walk. Now, they have small lights in the tunnel so visitors can see
but back then it was full of darkness. We were shown where the prisoners had to
line up and be shot and also where some were hung to their death. Seeing all
this made me extremely sad. I almost felt guilty, as I was getting hungry
wondering when we were going to eat next. I can’t imagine being a prisoner
where I would hardly get a meal and that meal would only be soup or just a
small piece of bread each day. Seeing sights like this and learning about what
people in the past had to go through makes me that much more grateful of the
life I live. It reminds me that I should complain less and enjoy what I do have
instead of wishing upon things that I don’t have.
I have
always enjoyed learning about the Holocaust and feel privileged to have now
seen a concentration camp. I can’t stand knowing that people had to live
through these conditions. Several were not able to survive because of many
spreading diseases, hard labor and lack of food. This field trip was not a
‘fun’ experience but a very educational one.
