A classic story that makes people cry.

Uncle & lt, would you please bury me shallower? Otherwise, when my mother comes to see me ... >

During World War II, many Jews were imprisoned in concentration camps in Nazi Germany. They were brutally tortured and killed by the Nazis, and their numbers are decreasing.

There was an innocent and lively little girl who was locked up in a concentration camp with her mother. One day, her mother and other women were taken away by Nazi soldiers and never returned to her. But when the little girl asked the adults, where was her mother? The adults said to the little girl with tears, your mother has gone to find your father and will be back soon. The little girl believed it. Instead of crying, she sang many children's songs that her mother taught her. From time to time, she climbed up the small window of her cell and looked out, hoping to see her mother come back.

Before her mother came back, the little girl was driven away by Nazi soldiers with bayonets one morning, forcing her and tens of thousands of Jews to the execution ground. The execution ground has dug a big pit, and they will be buried alive here together.

One by one, people were brutally pushed down the pit by Nazi soldiers. When a Nazi soldier reached out and pushed the little girl into the pit, she opened her beautiful eyes and said to the Nazi soldier, "Uncle, would you please bury me a little shallower?" Otherwise, when my mother came to me, I couldn't find it. "Nazi soldiers' outstretched hands froze there, and there was a sob on the execution ground, followed by angry cries. ...

Finally, no one can escape from the Nazis. But the innocent words of the little girl hurt people's hearts and made them find the dignity and strength of human nature before they died.

Can violence really destroy everything? No, in the face of pure love and humanity, violence makes violent people see their ugliness and smallness. The executioners trembled before the childlike innocence of love, because they also saw their own ending.