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Monologue About The Other Side Of The Concentration Camp

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Strange. Bruno asking me about the other side of the concentration camp. Why would he ask me this in the first place? The main thing Bruno needs to know is that we must never interact with the men and children on the other side of the fence, for they are jews and should never speak to us. We are the opposite of the jews on the other side of that fence. The fence isn't there to stop us from going over there, It's to stop them from coming over here. I concentrate on the various maps I have pasted on the walls and the newspapers for hours at a time before I start to pin important locations in Germany. The Fury (Hitler) told me it's good to be educated on today's news in Germany. Lots of it hasto do with jews. The jews on the other side of the fence belong to be their- to be abused, to be suffering, and to be in great pain. …show more content…
Now they must fix the problems, which is why I believe they were put in the concentration camps in the first place. Bruno is confused about the jews on the other side of the fence. He asks why don't we like jews and if we ourselves are jews. I knew he couldn't be saying such things especially in front of father (he wasn't with us gladly). The main thing Bruno needs to understand as a result is that jews are vicious and we must never make contact with them ever. Our father is the commandant of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Our father directs the camp headquarters and is responsible for all issues of the camp. I had to help Bruno understand what the people ¨in the striped pyjamas¨ were doing their, so I simply told him that they can't mix with us (the jews). I pray that Bruno never encounters a jew on the other side of the

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