What does the incident on pages 118 and 119 tell us about relations between jews and germans? does the knowledge that some nazis fraternized with their victims make their crimes more or less horrible?

Respuesta :

The incident on pages 118 and 119 showed that the relations between Jews and Germans was one where the Jews did whatever they could to survive being killed by Germans.

The knowledge that some Nazis fraternized with their victims makes their crimes more horrible because they knew the people they would kill.

How did Jews and Germans relate?

In the book, "Maus" by Art Spiegelman, we are introduced to some people who survived the German holocaust of Jews and what they had to do to survive.

In pages 118 and 119, Nazis and Jews are playing a card game and Haskel ( Polish Jew) lost to the Germans on purpose to protect his family. This showed that Jews had to do different things to survive.

The Nazis fraternized with their victims in these pages which showed that they knew the people they would kill. That made their crimes worse as they always knew who they would kill and spoke to them with familiarity.

Find out more on Jews and Germans at https://brainly.com/question/892271

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