
In the article "Iraq kills 55 as Shia and police targeted", the intended audience is most likely US or UK citizens interested in current world affairs, as the events in this article take place in the Middle East. The purpose of this article is to inform the public of the terrorism in the Middle East and to give an update on how the violence has recently worsened, as the article clearly states how Shia areas continue to be bombed and shot at by Iraq. For example, a witness, Ahmed Kadhim, tells what he saw: "We were sitting at a restaurant having soup for breakfast when the bomb exploded. I lost consciousness and then saw smoke and dust. I saw people and body parts everywhere."
The events in this article remind me of the events in the book All But My Life, a Holocaust survivor's memoir. First of all, the violence in the article is similar to the violence that occurred during the Kristallnacht pogroms in the book. In the Middle East, Shia areas were bombed and large numbers of people were shot. Similarly, at the beginning of the book, Gerda mentions how large groups of Jews and non-Aryans in general were killed and tortured during Kristallnacht: "several Jews had been rounded up in the streets, locked in the Temple, and the Temple set on fire." (Klein, 1995, pg. 9) Also, the attacks in both conflicts were carried out by certain groups of people: neither conflict had random people going around killing random people. In the Middle East, certain terrorist groups in Iraq, such as al-Qaeda, are accused of the violence in the Shia territories. Similarly, the Nazi regime was to blame for the Kristallnacht pogroms during the Holocaust, and all acts of violence towards non-Aryans that followed. Based on these connections, the violence in the Middle East does connect well with the specific acts of violence in the book All But My Life.