The Ghettos
You move to a new area of town. It was hard saying goodbye to your house, but your new location isn't so bad. In fact, in some ways, it is better! In your new community, Jewish men and women become leaders. You can go to the restaurants there and even have visitors. Yes, you still have a curfew, German soldiers are present, and the neighborhood is overly populated (you've heard rumors there are 300,000 people in this neighborhood!) but it is better than life before. You miss your old non-Jewish friends and family, but you figure this living situation is temporary and you will be reunited with them soon enough. After all, the neighborhood is located right next to a railway hub, so clearly this is a transitional place.
One day, a man your father used to work with visits the ghetto. He tells you the Germans plan on transporting you and all your neighbors to a new location outside of town. He urges you to try to leave the ghetto and come with him. Your mother and father feel they need to stay with your former neighbors but urge you and your siblings to go with your father's coworker, Hans. What should you do? Stay with your parents or go with this man you hardly know?
One day, a man your father used to work with visits the ghetto. He tells you the Germans plan on transporting you and all your neighbors to a new location outside of town. He urges you to try to leave the ghetto and come with him. Your mother and father feel they need to stay with your former neighbors but urge you and your siblings to go with your father's coworker, Hans. What should you do? Stay with your parents or go with this man you hardly know?