Archive for April, 2009

Munich andd weree back

Posted in 1 on April 28, 2009 by ebrod

So its been a long time since my last post about traveling so I figured I would discuss one of the most thought provoking and influential trips of this abroad experience.

My friends and I had decided on Munich as our destination instead of Berlin when traveling to Germany for two reasons. One being that it was highly recommended to us and two being that there was a famous concentration camp in close distance.

We saw all the main sights in Munich: The HB beer hall, The BMW museum/factory, King Ludwig’s Castle and took a bus tour around the entire city.

The purpose of this particular blog is to focus on Dachau which is the concentration camp outside of Munich. If you are uninformed about what happened during WWII, Hitler and Nazi Germany planned the “Final Solution” which they believed was the complete and total extermination of the Jewish people. This event is known in history as the Holocaust. What many people don’t realize is that although the incredible majority of people that were systematically killed were Jewish, many people of other backgrounds were murdered.

Dachau

Dachau


Dachau was originally known for being a work camp, and therefore not only housed Jews but political opponents of Hitler, gypsies and others. I have been to many Holocaust museums in the United States. I have visited Yad Vashem in Israel (The Holocaust Museum in Israel). I have never been to a place where you can sense the pain and torture throughout all the acres of the area. As the war went on Dachau quickly became a death camp in order to expedite the systematic killing of all these people. They were put into gas chambers and gassed to death by the hundreds.

The abuse of the Jewish people is so intensely absurd that it is difficult to believe that this could have occurred less than 70 years ago. What is more difficult to grasp is that the people living in the town of Dachau were footsteps away from this slaughter and had the naivety to not be concerned about the smell of dead bodies being burned in the furnaces.

Gas Chambers

Gas Chambers


Walking around the camp you get a sense of the feeling but can never imagine what the people that were prisoners there must have felt like. It is an incredible experience in the sense of seeing the atrocities that one man can commit against another especially in modern times. I apologize for the intensity of this particular blog but I urge anyone who reads this to visit this or any other Holocaust camps.

Munich all in all was incredible. The beer was great, our hotel room was awesome (we stayed at the holiday inn munich which was very reasonable, clean and modern), and the food was really good. We wanted to rent cars and drive on the autobahn but you need to be at least 25 so if you are, enjoy…..

New York Times Front Page Podcast

Posted in 1 on April 27, 2009 by ebrod

NY Times Podcast

Student Activism Continued….

Posted in 1 on April 2, 2009 by ebrod

So obviously as much as I adore my University, I cannot deny the fact that many other students at other schools are just as fervent about getting their voices heard. Throughout the country, proven by the masses of young voters, people of my generation have told the world what they think about so many crucial issues and illustrated this by turning to polls in drones. Not just the University of Wisconsin- Madison, but schools like Cornell University, Syracuse University and the University of Michigan- Ann Arbor, also have their student body making sure that they are active and involved in political and social choices that other people and this country make.

Student Activism is not a new phenomenon. It has been encompassing campuses during the Civil Rights movement, Vietnam, and more recently the Iraq war. Campuses and higher education inspire young adults to express their opinions and that they do. With the generally liberal education that is delivered at many Universities, students are taught

The following is three interviews from students each at their respective schools. As juniors they have been on campus for three years and have seen this student activism first hand in the classroom, in the quad, during elections, during crisis and during times where important decisions are on the verge of being made at Washington or even in their local area……