“A positive attitude causes a chain reaction of positive thoughts, events and outcomes. It is a catalyst and it sparks extraordinary results.” (Wade Boggs). Anne Frank is a person who remained positive even while their family was in hiding, especially at times where being scared and sad was fine. Another person who remained positive during tough times is Winston Churchill, he was the prime minister of England during WWII and kept the entire country positive while they were being bombed. Doing this kept the country alive and well. If they didn’t do this, the Nazis may have taken over England. Being positive, Like Anne Frank and Churchill, when encountering conflict can help, since remaining positive during a conflict can make the conflict not seem as extreme or bad as it is. …show more content…
He recorded his own story with his book “Night”. After being liberated from Buchenwald, Birkenau, Auschwitz, and Buna he swore himself to a ten-year silence of not speaking about what he experienced at the camps. “ She must be in a in a labor camp. And Tzipora’s a big girl now isn’t she? She must be in a camp, too.” ( Wiesel Pg 43). This was after Elie and his father was separated from his mom and sister. In this quote Elie’s father is telling Elie that his mom and sister are still alive even though they don’t know to try to keep both of them happy and positive. They do this because if they know that his mom and sister are dead they have nothing left to live for other than each other, which would put them in a sad and depressed mood which would make the conflict worse. Also if they are depressed they would not want to work hard to get out, so if they don’t work they get thrown in the furnace. If they both think that the rest of the family is still alive their positive and happy attitude would drive them to try to work hard to get out of the camp.Keeping a positive attitude even when it's just off hope can make even the worst situations seem
In the memoir, Night, Elie’s description about his arrival and selection in Auschwitz relates to the survivors in the videos because they all mentioned how as soon as they exited the train they were immediately separated from their families. In the very beginning Elie was separated from his mother and sister and he didn’t know it would be the last time he would ever see them. “Men to the left! Women to the right”(Wiesel 28). Just those eight words changed Elie’s life forever.
One phenomenon, one dictator, and one country would change the life of a fifteen year old Jew forever. Stripped of his home in Transylvania and forced on copious deportation trains traveling to multiple concentration camps, Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night explores the treacherous and horrific life of a Jew during the Holocaust. Through the traumatizing punishments and lifestyle of concentration camps, a faithful and loyal boy metamorphosed into a selfish and unfaithful man. Early on in his childhood, Elie was immensely devoted to his faith, so far as “...finding a master... in the person of Moishe the Beadle”(Wiesel 4). To have a master meant that he would have a religious mentor to help him study Kabbalah, thus allowing him to interpret the Bible for himself.
Imagine showing up to church, nothing different from every other time you arrive. However, this time when you show up, you notice flames and pure destruction. Today, this scenario seems make-believe, however this was not the case in Sighet, Transylvania in 1941. According to Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night, once the German soldiers arrived in Sighet, many norms were altered, such as their laws and attires. Eli Wiesel uses night as a motif in the memoir Night in order to convey an underlying message about the increase of darkness, possibilities of death and lack of humanity once non-authoritarian members arrive.
Life in concentration camps brought the struggle between life and death, so Wiesel writes Night to share about his experience in a life or death situation he encountered with his father during one of the selections they went through. Wiesel starts out by saying,“The roll call was shorter than usual. The evening soup was distributed at great speed, swallowed as quickly. We were anxious.” As time went on, the conditions in the concentration camps began to grow more dreadful.
Night by Elie Wiesel includes one horrific story when the Jews are being transported on trains. Bread is thrown into the trains by Germans standing by. This story tells us how relationship between fathers and sons changed. The relationship between fathers and sons is one of the strongest bond you can have.
Throughout times of conflict, people overlook their self-identity and lose all forms of humanity, often shown through the deprivation of empathy, mercy, and kindness. Namely, these losses frequently occur through both the oppressor and the oppressed. Night, by Elie Wiesel, takes place in the 1940s during the Second World War in Nazi Germany. In the novel, Elie Wiesel demonstrates the great deal of agony he went through during the Holocaust, and his survivor’s guilt, as an ironic and unfortunate Holocaust survivor.
When torment and fatality lingers closely around the corner, humanity's view of the world battles for pleasantry amidst the despair. In Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, Wiesel and the ensnared Jews of his community struggle through the transition of leaving their tranquil town and entering a life of strenuous work inside Auschwitz. Throughout their transition, the Jews struggle to keep a jubilant view of the world surrounding them as they enter a life filled with dismay. Wiesel uses whimsical and despairing diction to contrast the Jew’s consoling denial of death and the impending shock and agony of the crematoriums. Showing the misery soon to come, Wiesel uses assuaging phrases that are quickly contrasted by foreboding ones.
To begin, our interactions define us when we believe in a religion because it is what we have hope and faith in. In the excerpt “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Elie is in a concentration camp where he begins to lose his faith in God because he has seen things that he wished he had not. The texts says, “Never shall I forget those flames that consumed my faith forever ”(Wiesel 37). What this quote shows is throughout the time when Elie was at the concentration camp he saw the way people were being burned alive and thrown into the flames. This shows interactions by how the Jews were treated in a negative way.
“Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering.”(Yoda). Night is a book written by Elie Wiesel and published in 1956. The book is about a child named Elie and it details his experiences throughout the holocaust and how he survived the Nazi death camps.
This moment in the book provokes feelings of sadness and pity. The Jews had been so packed in these barracks after the marches, that men we piled on top of each other, dead or alive, it became so hard to breathe that many of the men suffocated to death. Elie was one of the men who was buried beneath all of the people. He was trying to get air when he heard the boy beneath him shouting “You’re crushing me… mercy! mercy!”. The boy was the violinist from Buna named Juliek.
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.
Elise Pratt Ms. McLaughlin English 9 May 3, 2023 Loyalty: The Strength They Need People wonder how important loyalty is in stressful or harmful situations. The book Night is a memoir written by Elie Wiesel about his experience with the Holocaust and his experience in the concentration camps. The Holocaust was a period when European Jews were treated horribly by followers of Adolf Hitler. During the 1930s-40s loyalty was something everyone had to try their best to hold on to whether it was for family, getting used against them, and in this case, possibly backfiring on Wiesel himself.
Night is a memoir written by Elie Wiesel detailing his experiences in the Nazi German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald. The memoir takes place in the years 1944 and 1945, and highlights the changes that Elie went through in these years. The memoir begins with Elie and his father being forced out of his home in Sighet and being taken captive by the Nazis. While in the Nazi concentration camps, he is starved, abused, and emotionally scarred, and this auto-biography explains this in detail. In this single year in his life, he undergoes physical, emotional, and mental changes that no child should be subjected to.
The events of the Holocaust remain responsible for the death of eleven million people. The very word represents grave sites, memories, speeches, trials, and torture. The survivors of the Holocaust recall memories of the concentration camps that operated like machines of death. Elie Wiesel, one of the survivors of the Holocaust, tells his story through his writing in Night. The Holocaust is documented as a horrific point in history that cost eleven million people their lives including six million Jews.
The moment Elie was separated from his mother and sister, “all I [Elie] could think of was not to lose him [Elie’s father],” (Wiesel 30). This thought ran through Elie’s mind while he was waiting in line to inform the SS officer his age and profession. Next to him in line was his father and another inmate.