The Book Thief
The Book Thief
The Book Thief
HORROR
OF NAZI
GERMANY
By Kristin Lewis
Y
ou are about to perform a fictional drama that takes place during
a real period of the past. This period is one of the most horrifying
in history. For 12 years—from 1933 to 1945—Adolf Hitler and the
Nazi Party ruled Germany with total control. The Nazis believed
that certain groups of people were “inferior.” And they believed
that the inferior did not deserve to live.
After their defeat in World War I, many Germans felt
humiliated and angry. The country’s economy was in tatters,
and jobs were hard to come by. Hitler offered up a scapegoat:
Jewish people.
Anti-Semitism, or hatred of Jewish people, had existed in Europe for centuries. Jewish
people were often despised for being different—for having different beliefs and customs.
Hitler fanned the flames of these old prejudices. In his speeches, he said Jewish people were
to blame for all of Germany’s problems. He called them “vermin.”
In the 1930s, laws were passed requiring Jewish people to give up their jobs and their
rights; Jewish children were no longer allowed to go to school. By the end of the decade,
Jews were being forced from their homes. The ruthless secret police known as the Gestapo,
along with a powerful military force called the SS, helped enforce anti-Jewish laws.
The Nazis’ ultimate plan was to rid Europe of all Jewish people. They referred to this plan
as the “Final Solution,” and they carried it out with terrifying precision. They built death
camps (also known as concentration camps) and used gas chambers to systematically
murder Jewish men, women, and children, along with others they considered inferior,
including the Roma (or Gypsies, as they were called), the mentally ill, and the disabled.
KEYSTONE/HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES; PAGE 11: BETTMANN/CORBIS
Book Thief
The
1212
SCHOLASTIC
SCHOLASTIC
SCOPE
SCOPE
• OCTOBER
• APRIL
11,2014
2010
Drama
CHARACTERS
Circle the character you will play. *LIESEL MEMINGER, a German girl ILSA HERMANN, the mayor’s wife
*Starred characters are major roles. *ROSA HUBERMANN, Liesel’s Mama HISTORIAN
*NARRATORS 1 & 2 (N1, N2) *HANS HUBERMANN, Liesel’s Papa MAX, a young Jewish man
*DEATH HERR HERMANN, the mayor CAPTION READER
N1: For the past two years, Liesel has been raised by her N2: The crowd cheers and shouts in approval.
ADAPTED WITH PERMISSION FROM THE MOTION PICTURE THE BOOK THIEF. SCREENPLAY BY MICHAEL PETRONI, BASED ON THE NOVEL BY
adoptive parents, Rosa and Hans, who love her deeply. HERMANN: Now we must purify from within. Education,
N2: Liesel couldn’t read or write when she first came to film, literature, newspapers—these should express only
live with them. Hans couldn’t read very well either. the values of our great people. Anything that does not
N1: So Liesel and Hans read together every day. Now, it must be destroyed.
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is their favorite activity. N1: People begin throwing books on the fire.
LIESEL (gasping in horror): No! Stop!
Act One HANS: Shhh! Someone will hear you!
SCENE 1 N2: Liesel watches in agony as hundreds of books
DEATH: One small fact: You are going to die. Sorry to be crackle in the flames.
such a spoiler, but no one lives forever. (pause) I guess I
should introduce myself. Then again, you’ll meet me SCENE 2
soon enough. Not before your time, of course. I make it N1: Liesel sits in her room holding a charred book as
a policy to avoid the living. Except every once in a long though it were a priceless jewel.
while, I can’t help myself. I get interested. And I don’t LIESEL (reading): The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells.
know what it was about Liesel Meminger, but she HANS (walking in): What is that? Hans
caught my attention—and I cared. Did you—did you steal that? Hubermann
N2: Liesel sits on a couch, reading. LIESEL: Please don’t be mad. I took it
ROSA (trailing behind Hans): Where is it? Every other from the bonfire.
house on this street has one. If we don’t find it, it’s going HANS: Were you seen?
to seem like we are trying to say something! LIESEL: No.
HANS: Calm down. The Nazi flag is in the basement. HANS (with a tired smile): All right. This
ROSA: Good. Hang it, and then we must go. will be our secret. But we must
HANS (wearily): I know. be careful. If we get caught with
SCENE 3
HISTORIAN: Months pass. Germany is
changing. Across the country, Jewish
people are being rounded up and
taken away.
N2: Late one night, there is a knock
on the door.
Ilsa shares her
ROSA: Who could that be at this library with Liesel.
hour?
N1: Hans opens the door to a haggard young man. down doors and dragging us from our homes. My
MAX: Hans Hubermann? mother begged me to leave her and run.
HANS: Yes? DEATH: When I finally caught up to Max’s soul, it was
MAX: I am Max Vandenburg. that moment that haunted him most.
N2: Max collapses. Hans quickly drags him inside. N2: Max’s eyes fill with tears.
ROSA: Close the door! Quick! LIESEL: It’s OK. I cried a lot when I first came here too.
LIESEL: Who is that, Papa? N1: Max wipes his eyes.
HANS: This boy’s father saved my life long ago, in the LIESEL: I am sorry you can’t have a real bed. Papa says it
war. I promised if I could ever help his family, I would. would look suspicious if anyone saw it.
ROSA: We must get him warm. MAX: Do not apologize. I am putting you all in danger.
HANS: Liesel, you must promise not to tell anyone about N2: Upstairs, Rosa and Hans speak quietly.
our visitor. If you tell, they will take us away. ROSA: What are we going to feed him? We barely have
N1: Hans looks at Max. enough for ourselves.
HANS: I don’t want to tell you what they will HANS: We will make do. We must.
do to him. ROSA: But what if we are caught?
N2: Later, in the basement, Liesel sits beside HANS: Max will have to stay in the basement.
Max, who is asleep on a bed made of ROSA: If even one neighbor suspects . . .
cardboard boxes. He looks ill.
N1: She sees a copy of Mein Kampf tucked in Act Two
his jacket. She reaches for it when— SCENE 1
MAX (awake): You’re a curious girl. Mein Kampf (“My HISTORIAN: Many Germans have embraced
LIESEL: I didn’t mean to— Struggle”) was a Hitler and the Nazi party. But for Germans
manifesto that
THE GRANGER COLLECTION, NEW YORK (BOOK)
MAX: It’s all right. outlined Hitler’s like Hans who refuse to join the party, life
LIESEL: Is this book good? extreme racist views becomes more dangerous by the day. They
about Jewish people
MAX: This is Hitler’s memoir, and it is far and his plans for the are viewed with mistrust and suspicion.
from good. But it saved me, in a way. If I was future of Germany. N1: Rosa does laundry to earn money for the
Owning it was a way
stopped, nobody who saw me with this book to prove loyalty to family. Liesel helps with deliveries.
would suspect I was a Jew. Hitler. By the end of N2: Liesel rings the bell at a mansion. She
World War II, more
LIESEL: What happened to your family? than a million copies glances around nervously.
MAX: The Nazis came to my street, banging had been sold. N1: A familiar-looking woman answers the
ACTIVITY
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