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Years after reading it, Maus still haunts me (and that's a good thing.)

I read it as a kid and didn't realize it was a target for censorship and removal until I was older. It was extremely impactful to me because it was the first time I ever read about the holocaust from an exclusively Jewish perspective.

It disturbed me as a kid. A lot.

I had known as a kid about the basic horrors of the holocaust and that people died especially growing up having Jewish family. But what I did not really did grasp until reading Maus is that the people who committed the holocaust weren't these comically evil villains. Nazis weren't these inhuman monsters that everyone just instantly despised, no. They were human beings. Neighbors, doctors, lawyers, friends, family members, most of them were every day people. Realizing that disturbed me more than anything else, that these people years prior could have had a casual conversation on the street or been neighbors with the people they were now murdering.

Realizing that was integral in understanding the holocaust for me, alongside just realizing that parts of it just can't be understood. No matter how much it disturbed me as a child, it taught me more than anything else up until that point.

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