Hello fellow bloggers! My name is Sarah Fontaine and I am currently a senior (FINALLY) at Westborough High School. The first semester I chose to take a really great course called Facing History and Ourselves, which was taught by Mr. Gregory Gallagher. There is not really one certain way to describe this class and what it is all about. I think that when everyone in the class signed up for it they all had their own ideas about what we would be learning these first 4 months of school. I am going to be honest, at first I thought that it was just about the Holocaust and the events that lead up to it; that was originally the reason I chose to take this course (along with the fact that I had heard great things about it). With only a few days left in this class I realized that it is about so much more than that. This class is to show kids my age what happens when you are a bystander. Sure, some people might say that the Holocaust is an extreme example of that, but it really isn’t. Mr. Gallagher made us realize what the world could eventually to come to if everyone doesn’t stop watching horrible things go on that they do not agree with. Everyone says that the world needs to change, that people and society to change. Well if we want these things we need to start doing something about it! Everyone has a responsibility to do what they think is right.
Sarah Fontaine's Blog
Monday, January 14, 2013
What Facing History and Ourselves Meant to Me
What Facing History and Ourselves Meant to Me
By Sarah Fontaine
One of the semester courses I decided to take this year was Facing History and Ourselves taught by Mr. Gallagher. With the little time I have left in Facing History I can honestly say that this was my favorite class I took out of all four years at Westborough High School. Now, I know that whoever sees this essay is going to say "You are definitely only saying that because you know Mr. Gallagher has to read it and you want a good grade." Well I can assure all of you that that is not the case at all. Facing History has taught me more about myself than any other class I ever took at WHS, and maybe any class I will take in college the next four years. This class is so much more than just to teach the juniors and seniors at our school about the Holocaust in Germany. It is about showing all of us the effects of being a bystander, and just how terrible things can get if we do not to learn to change our ways. Throughout these past couple of months we have watched so many videos and read articles that I don’t think I will ever be able to forget.
The second movie that was meaningful to me in Facing History and Ourselves was The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. This movie was about a family that moved to a house closer to a concentration camp after the father got a promotion in the Nazi army. The main character in this movie is the eight year old son named Bruno. Bruno, being an innocent kid that does not know any better, refers to the camp as the farm because that is what he thinks it is. After his mother discovers the camp is so close to the house she gives Bruno strict orders to not go in the backyard or go near the "farm", which of course he defies. Every day he runs to the camp and talks to a Jewish boy he befriended through the fence. The movie goes on to show Bruno and the boy to make a plan for Bruno to sneak into the camp so they can play. Bruno ends up being accidently gassed to death with everyone else in the camp. Even though this movie is not based off a true story it still really stuck with me. The fact that Bruno was killed in the camp his father was in charge of was, to me at least, karma at work. People who either do terrible things or watch terrible things happen without doing anything are going to be punished. It could be by a person or just the universe in the form of karma. This movie showed me one of the ways the world got back at these Nazi soldiers and even though I’m sad that little Bruno died, I think it was the only way that his father was going to get just how terrible what he was doing was. Another thing this movie showed with Bruno’s death was that these Jews being killed and tortured were the same as everyone else; they were the same as Bruno. They did not deserve to be treated the way they were, just like Bruno didn’t deserve to die.
Works Cited
Arbeit Macht Frei. Google Images. Image. 13 January 2013.Dead Bodies. Google Images. Image. 13 January 2013.
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. Google Images. Image.13 January 2013.
The Grey Zone. Google Images. Image. 13 January 2013.
The Victims. Google Images. Image. 13 January 2013.
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