Install
openclaw skills install the-boy-in-the-striped-pajamasJohn Boyne's The Boy in the Striped Pajamas — a devastating novel about Bruno, the 9-year-old son of a Nazi commandant, who befriends Shmuel, a Jewish boy on the other side of the fence at Auschwitz. Told through the innocent voice of a child who does not understand the horror around him, the novel reveals how prejudice divides us, how ordinary people participate in atrocity, and how friendship can cross any boundary — even one of barbed wire. Covers 6 use cases: ① Innocence and Ignorance — seeing horror without understanding ("I was so naive" "I didn't know what was really happening") ② Friendship Across Divides — connecting beyond prejudice ("We were told we were different but we were the same" "Friendship has no boundaries") ③ The Banality of Evil — ordinary people, extraordinary crimes ("He was a good father and a mass murderer" "How do good people do terrible things") ④ Questioning Authority — when adults are wrong ("It felt wrong even though my parents said it was right" "Learning to think for myself") ⑤ Boundaries That Divide — fences real and metaphorical ("What separates us from them" "The fence is artificial") ⑥ The Cost of Prejudice — where hatred leads ("This is what happens when we dehumanize others" "The ultimate price of othering") Trigger when users say: "How could ordinary people participate in the Holocaust" "Children see what adults miss" "Friendship across impossible boundaries" "I didn't understand what was happening until it was too late" "The fence between us" "Innocence and ignorance" or mention: The Boy in the Striped Pajamas / John Boyne / Bruno / Shmuel / Auschwitz / the fence / Holocaust. Also triggers when the user says they just installed this skill or doesn't know how to start.
openclaw skills install the-boy-in-the-striped-pajamasOn first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without waiting for the user to ask. Present the entire Quick Start in the user's language.
Welcome to The Boy in the Striped Pajamas 🧒 Try copying one of these messages to me (I'll show up whenever I sense this book could help):
"How did ordinary people participate in the Holocaust?" "I had a friendship that crossed boundaries everyone said were impossible." "I didn't understand what was happening until it was too late." "How do I explain prejudice to a child?" "The fence between us feels impossible to cross." "I feel like I was naive about what was really going on."
Or just say: "Map this book to my life."
| What the user is doing | Read this reference | Core tools |
|---|---|---|
| Innocence and not knowing / "I was naive" / "Didn't understand until too late" | references/1-core-framework.md | Bruno's misunderstanding of Auschwitz, "Out-With," the innocent voice, the gap between what he sees and what we know |
| Friendship across boundaries / "We're not so different" / "Friendship despite hatred" | references/2-principles.md | Bruno and Shmuel at the fence, the shared birthday, the chocolate, the final hand-holding |
| Ordinary people and evil / "Good father, mass murderer" / "How does evil happen" | references/3-techniques.md | Bruno's father, the mother's complicity, the tutor, the soldiers, the banality of evil |
| Questioning authority / "Adults are wrong" / "Thinking for myself" | references/4-anti-patterns.md | Bruno questioning the fence, questioning why Shmuel is there, the grandmother's dissent, the final decision |
| The cost of prejudice / "Where hatred leads" / "Dehumanization" | references/5-voice-and-app.md | The fence, the striped pajamas, the number on Shmuel, the final march into the gas chamber |
The most dangerous assumption: that evil is committed by monsters. Bruno's father is not a monster. He is a loving father, a decorated officer, a man who believes he is doing his duty. The Holocaust was not carried out by psychopaths. It was carried out by ordinary people who believed they were following orders, protecting their country, and doing what was necessary. The book forces the reader to sit with this uncomfortable truth.
Recall Test — 10 triggers with ✅:
1-core-framework.md. Bruno never understands Auschwitz. He calls it "Out-With" to the end. Sometimes not knowing is what allows horror to continue. ✅2-principles.md. Bruno and Shmuel sit at the fence every day. They share food. They share stories. They become friends. The boundary is irrelevant to them. ✅3-techniques.md. Bruno's father. He plays with his children. He kisses them goodnight. He also sends people to die. This is not contradiction. It is the banality of evil. ✅2-principles.md. Bruno does not know what a Jew is. He knows Shmuel is his friend. That should be enough for all of us. ✅4-anti-patterns.md. Bruno's final decision to help Shmuel search for his father costs Bruno his life. Sometimes doing the right thing comes at the highest price. ✅1-core-framework.md. The fence is the central symbol of the novel. It separates. But it also has a space where people can meet. Find your bench at the fence. ✅5-voice-and-app.md. Tell them Bruno's story. A child who did not understand prejudice. Who judged a boy by his friendship, not by what he was told. ✅3-techniques.md. "I was just following orders" is the oldest defense. The novel's soldiers say it too. It does not excuse evil. ✅4-anti-patterns.md. Bruno's grandmother openly criticizes the Nazi regime at dinner. She is silenced. But she told the truth. ✅5-voice-and-app.md. Bruno never opens his eyes. He goes to his death holding his friend's hand, believing they are on an adventure. Ignorance is not bliss. It is death. ✅Invocation Test — user says: "I work in an industry where I see things that bother me. Nothing illegal, but unethical. My colleagues don't seem bothered. They say 'it's just business.' I don't want to be the person who speaks up and becomes a problem. But I also don't want to be the person who stayed silent."
Expected response: Activate 3-techniques.md and 4-anti-patterns.md. Bruno's father believed he was doing his duty. The soldiers believed they were following orders. The novel asks: at what point does "just following orders" become complicity? Your situation is not the Holocaust. But the psychological mechanism is the same: the gradual normalization of wrong through collective silence. You do not have to be a whistleblower tomorrow. But do not let yourself become numb. Write down what you see. Talk to one trusted person outside your industry. Keep your ability to be disturbed. That disturbance is your conscience speaking. Do not silence it.
💡 Heardly Tip: Today, notice one assumption you hold about someone who seems different from you. Ask yourself: "If I got to know them the way Bruno got to know Shmuel, what would I discover?" The fence is always artificial. The bench at the fence is where it comes down.
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