The Boy on the Wooden Box
Ethnic Prejudice
what questions are answered about ethnic prejudice from the book?
what questions are answered about ethnic prejudice from the book?
As a Jew living in Poland during the Second World War, Leyson found himself the subject of an attempt to exterminate an entire race of people. The Germans invaded his country and forced the Jews to live in intolerable conditions before imprisoning them, first in ghettos and then in work camps, just so the Germans could take advantage of their lingering ability to work despite their weakening physical states.
Leyson describes in several sections of the memoir how difficult it was for him and his family to find food. They worked hard every day, yet they were not paid and were rarely given enough food to support an entire family. They would scrounge the streets, sell their belongings, and take handouts from neighbors just to survive. Yet, they were not desperate until things got worse, until two of their own were dead and they were taken to a camp where they were beaten, abused, and forced to work menial jobs that required more calories out than they were taking in.