
All the training he went into the Gestapo and in the SS consisted of voluntary submission to the process of animality and only helped him blur all the reflexes of humanity.
Stroop's psyche is demoralized, distorted. During the extermination of Jews, he shows his "carefree" in murdering people. Fascist ideals help him, indicating the full subordination of the supervisor, So our hero justifies his actions. Blindly executed orders are one side of the coin, However, the fact is inexplicable, that their extraordinary brutality never wondered Jurgen Stroop.
He is an hypocritical man, delicious, arrogant. All these features were instilled in his own consent by fascist principals. Thanks to the drowning of the voice of your conscience, your indescribable brutality, and also "urgency" in fulfilling orders, becomes one of the most magnificent SS generals.
Miron Białoszewski in "Diary from the Warsaw Uprising" tells his own story with simple words. Says about 63 days, he survived in Warsaw, at the same time describing the fate of the civilian population of the capital. Tells each day in the form of a diary in detail. Uses colloquial language, called by the author himself "Gadanin", saturated single sentences or equivalents, colloquialisms and sound -like words, However, such a literary style allows for the most realistic dedication of the circumstances of the uprising and describing the usual everyday life of the inhabitants of Warsaw in this period.
View of the Fighting Warsaw, which Białoszewski shows us, is full of terrifying images. He talks about scared people with bundles, who hide from bombing, looking for new and new ones, safer hideouts. They move from those who are threatened with fire or attack by German soldiers of places, for fear of murdering and blowing up houses. People are still trying to escape somewhere, They don't want to give up, because they are fighting not for the freedom of their homeland, But for your own life. Miron Białoszewski in his work is limited to describing only hearing-eye sensations, it does not delve into its own motives, He approaches "that" miron with a distance. However, it's easy to see, that the war has a significant impact on his psyche. The event is quite disturbing, When Białoszewski is a witness to the wounding by the Germans on a random passerby street. Although the author is very close to it
places and hears the scream of the wounded, He can't help him, Because he wants to save his own life. We can see in his behavior far -reaching egoism and to some extent the disappearance of sympathy and human reflexes.
In my opinion, the war changed Białoszewski's psyche, pulling his best years from his life. Lata, in which he was fed with death instead of love, where instead of friendship he observed egoism, years in which the help of a neighbor was punished with death, and the ordinary human existence was interrupted by round -ups and executions.
By compiling these two heroes, the image of the victim and the executioner's psyche exposes to us. Stroop, as an torturer, sam – At some point in your life – fell victim to hypocritical ideology, However, he gave her to her immeasurably, allowing yourself to pick up all human reflexes. Białoszewski, on the other hand, as a victim of the Warsaw Uprising, He feels extreme emotions during him: From the desire to co -deal and help others, to selfishness and fight for your own life. Although they fought on opposite sides, The war undoubtedly left scratches in the psyche of both Jurgena, and Miron.