One is adherence to principles, and the other is dedication to "art". Of course, the background is in the concentration camps of World War II. The numbered prisoners in striped pajamas, the gunshots, the gas chambers. Wearing clothes is "second hand". . . Berg has been sticking to his principles, for those who don't have "that's why the Nazis are in full swing" and Sully "are you afraid of death or are you just trying to prove that you can make counterfeit money". Sally, "Can prisoners be friends too??" "You can never betray your teammates", is it because of a bowl of vegetable soup or a steamed bun. He has also been sticking to some of his principles. In fact, these are very trivial in ordinary eyes, but the current mention is World War II, and it is a Nazi concentration camp. Everyone only expects to live an extra day, or not to be put into a gas chamber because of the shortage of food and medical care. A rancid smell wafting from the chimney in The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas. Under this premise, the so-called little perseverance becomes particularly great. In the end, Germany was defeated, the concentration camps were overthrown, and people who had experienced vicissitudes and sufferings heard the music from the gramophone and burst into tears. Perhaps only the tears of a man can express that kind of mood at this time.
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