"Night" by Elie Wiesel is about a boy named Elie and his experiences during the Holocaust. Elie and his father were separated from his mother and sisters and taken to Auschwitz, the most deadly concentration camp in World War Two. After a long fight for survival at Auschwitz Elie and his father were moved to another concentration camp where Elie’s father dies from abuse. Shortly after Elie is rescued by the American army. In Night, Elie demonstrates that Humanity has a responsibility to stop inhuman cruelty through his experiences of being tortured and taken away from his home and family. We need to be aware of cruelty around us because people in need can be easily looked over or forgotten. Elie’s mentor, Moshe the Beadle, lived in Sighet. He was extremely quiet, irregular, also very religious. One day all the Jews from Sight were expelled, where they were then driven away and shot, but Moshe escaped. “Day after day, night after night, he went from one Jewish house to the next, telling his story” (Night 7). Moshe told everyone he could about the tortious acts the Germans were doing to the Jews, but nobody gave him any thought. If they listened to him, even considered what he was saying, they could have saved their own lives and potentially the lives of thousands. Torture is horrendous, but even before the …show more content…
The SS would show up unannounced to jewish communities and strip hundreds of innocent Jews from their homes, where they would be crammed into train carts, like cattle. “The ghetto was to be liquidated entirely. Departures were to take place street by street, starting the next day” (Night 13). The Jews were always looked down upon, but a home is a safe and accepting place that you earn and deserve. Telling someone that they don’t deserve a home is saying that they don’t have anything to live for, they have no value. Home is associated with family, which is another reason why it is so
Night, a beautifully written book by Eli Wiesal. He tells the story of what went on in the Holocaust and the struggles he faced to live through it. Elie constantly gets abused and treated like a pest throughout the whole book. The holocaust changed him and almost made him lose his will to live, humanity, and his family. He still powered through until he got liberated by America.
In Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night he compares two experiences of hanging through which the end result had been vastly different. The first hanging that he saw was of solely just a man and they were given soup afterwards; they were very hungry, their stomachs empty so once given that soup it had tasted as if he just won the lottery. Yes it was tragic but they had by then probably witnessed a lot of the hardships brought upon them by the Nazis’, so for them they only wanted soup. The second time was different, it was dark, inhumane, terribly horrifying. This time it was of three, two of which were adults; but that last one... that last one was a boy.
Hitler's main goal was to demolish all Jews or people that were not his idea of a perfect race. Night a memoir by Elie Wiesel is about the author and what he went through during the holocaust. The story starts in 1941 in Romania. Elie takes you through each step he took, including the ghettos and all the concentration camps he went to. Even when Elie wants to give up, he doesn't.
The book Night by Elie Wiesel, offers a depressing tone and reminds us that silence is destructive. The reader confronts this, desolation from Elie when he talks about becoming the son of the Rabbi. Elie promised himself that he would always be there for his father even during this horrendous time. As time progress, he inevitable breaks his promise and says nothing when the guards beat his delirious father on his deathbed. Sorrow is witnessed multiple times throughout the book, the pipel being hanged from the gallows and the inmates cry on the final train.
Susan Gale once wisely said, “Sometimes you don't realize your own strength until you come face to face with your greatest weakness.” Elie Wiesel wrote Night about his father and his experiences throughout the holocaust. In Night, Elie is taken to different camps, and during his stays he witnesses horror and tragedy. Elie’s whole family ends up murdered… all but him. Elie came out of the holocaust mentally stronger due to silence, family, and evil.
In the memoir Night, the author Elie Wiesel speaks of his experience as a Jew during World War ll. Elie Wiesel is a Jewish 13 year old boy who lives with his sister, dad, and mom. The Nazi’s come and his family is forced out. He and his father travel to many concentration camps and struggle to survive. Elie Wiesel shows that strength and resilience are essential to survive when encountering difficulties such as starvation, desperation, and being ridiculed.
Elie Wiesel, a Jewish Romanian-American writer, he is the author of the bestselling book "Night,” and he has a strong sense of moral responsibility for the people fighting racism and hatred. He is a Holocaust survivor, Wiesel survived Auschwitz, and many other concentration camps that he was sent to. After the liberation of the camps in April 1945, Wiesel spent a couple of years in an orphanage in France where he later studied in Paris. Wiesel lost his parents in his early childhood. He was 15 years old at the time and was separated from his mother and sister as soon as they got to Auschwitz, he never saw them again.
Wiesel became resentful toward his God when he witnessed the inhumane acts against innocent people. When Wiesel is in Buna, He witnesses the hanging of two men and a pipel for the possession of arms. The hanging went along as planned except for the fact that the executioner had not modified the hanging for a small thirteen year old child. It did not end his life with a quick snap of the neck but instead with a slow suffocation which they were forced to watch for over half an hour. Before the hanging Wiesel had heard a man ask where is God and how was this being allowed to happen.
Receiving the continuous blows that the concentration camps delivered and death breathing down his neck, Elie knows there is no “normal” way of living anymore. With death surrounding them, Elie, along with his father, are challenged when their faith, humanity, courage, and strength seem to be hanging by a thread. Elies incredible amount of emotion that he has put into his writing has a strong meaning and gives his audience a clear understanding of what evil he had overcome. [I remember: it happened yesterday, or eternities ago. A young Jewish boy discovered the Kingdom of Night.
In the Holocaust, Simon Wiesenthal claims that the Nazis murdered 11 million people. A Holocaust survivor, Elie Weisel won a Nobel Peace Prize for speaking against violence. In Elies’ speech, he explains that if anyone is suffering due to their race, class, or religion their suffering is the center of the universe. Elie felt the need to write his book Night, to recognize the suffering of Jews at the hands of Nazis. Examples of human suffering in which people should interfere are the Armenian Genocide in 1915 and the Russia Vs.
The personal accounts of what Elie went through and the things that he saw, paints a vivid picture of the holocaust. He goes into great detail of the cruelty he, his family, and his fellow Jews faced. “Behind me, an old man fell to the ground. Nearby, an SS man replaced his revolver in its holster” (p. 30). Families were separated.
A boy, only thirteen, was sentenced to be hanged along with two others. The prisoners gathered around the gallows as they were forced to bear witness to all the hangings that took place in the camp, but unlike the other times Eliezer, along with the other prisoners, wept. Eliezer even mentions that the Lagerkapo, the head of the camp, refused to act as executioner, instead three other SS guards took his place. Furthermore, after the chairs were tipped over, as the Lagerkapo commands the onlookers to remove their caps to pay their respect, Eliezer notes that the Lagerkapo’s voice is quivering. This is especially powerful because it is the only incidence in the novella where a Nazi shows any shred of humanity, and for this one small moment in time, all the observers are human.
Throughout the novel Night, Elie Wiesel reveals how in just a few moments his life dramatically changes in ways he never imagines. The title “Night” is a metaphor that refers to the evils and darkness of life, symbolizing death, the darkness of the soul, and loss of faith. Elie is innocent and devoted to becoming closer to God, but once witnessing the cruelties of humankind he questions his faith as well as his strength. The Great Depression in Germany provided the political opportunity for Adolf Hitler.
Night by Elie Wiesel tells about the struggles Elie goes to go through as a Jewish person during the Holocaust. While being sent to many different concentration camps, Elie experiences countless terrible situations and sees that some of the prisoners become cruel when given leadership roles within the camps. Many people had lost all civility they had in an effort to stay alive, sacrificing others for their own good. Elie manages to hold onto his decency through all of this, though, by helping out others within the camp occasionally and supporting his father whenever he could.
Elie Wiesel, a Jewish writer, professor, political activist, and a Holocaust survivor, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 for speaking out against violence, repression, and racism. The memoir, Night, depicts the traumatic account of Elie Wiesel and his life during the Holocaust. Wiesel reveals the horrors and violence him and his father experienced in the concentration camps. Hope is an important part of the story because it develops and declines throughout the story. Elie Wiesel describes his life before the Holocaust in the first few chapters.