Elie Wiesel is a Fifteen-year-old boy who has had extremely horrible events happen to him and his family. His family and his getting transported to Auschwitz is the start of Elie having no say in the choices and happenings in his life. Once this happened it was really hard for Elie to understand why he was put in the camp and a reason to keep moving forward with or without his father. It is incredibly hard to understand how any of this happened, but the book Night, written by Elie Wiesel, made it even harder to read from someone else’s perspective. It is their story; Elie’s story of having choiceless choices made for him and how he was able to survive through all of it. The biggest decision that was not only made for Elie and his family but …show more content…
Having to stand by and watch this happen once to his father and many times to others was really difficult for him. Elie could have intervened during the punishment but his father would not have wanted him to and Elie could have been injured or killed for trying to stop his father’s punishment. “And he began beating him with an iron bar. I had watched it all happening without moving. I kept silent.” (54) This choiceless choice is really hard to understand did he really have no choices or was he just afraid? If he dies though it would just be another life taken by the soldiers they would not care. Everyone in the camps are just trying to survive to hopefully live long enough to see family or just make it out. In the end, it seems like a choiceless choice because no one should have to pick between their death and being selfless and aiding someone who is to be harmed. Elie is incredibly strong for finding a way to keep his will to survive through all the choiceless choices that have been made for him throughout his …show more content…
Elie having to leave his home because the Germans said so and then get split from his mother and sister knowing full well that they are to be killed with no say is traumatizing. Elie and his father worked within the camp side by side until moresfully his father dies leaving him alone and killing something in Elie. Elie overcomes this when advice is given to him to be selfless for one and he is finally able to start living his life for himself. He started taking ownership of some of his decisions not giving in to all the choiceless choices that the Germans wanted for not only him but the Jews. He ultimately survived for the person he wanted back, the person that was here before the camp took it from him so he took it back and Elie did he took himself
Each time Elie was making a decisions insignificant or not it change the course of his future. For this exact reason people tell you to think first before you act or else there will be consequences big or small. Night,a memoir written
Elie had to focus on himself if he wanted to survive though, his feet were aching but he adapted to the pain and kept running. Elie just wanted to fall to the ground and be done with everything, die. He wanted all the pain and suffering to be over with. But his fathers presence was the only that that stopped him. Elie was his fathers motivation and fuel to keep staying alive.
Furthermore, Elie is a strong individual who went through something no one should ever have to go through. This experience he underwent had a major impact on him. In fact, he went from a young boy who had the world in the palm of his hand to someone he probably
The SS officer ordered Elie to go to his bed. “Then I had to go to bed, I climbed into my bunk, above my father, who was still alive”(Wiesel 106). He had to overcome climbing over his own father that was
Elie also impacts himself by being scared of letting go of his father, and by feeling this way it makes Elie stronger and pushes his father forward. Even though Elie’s father died, Elie still continued on with his hope of reaching the end of the awful journey. Strong is a word to Elie inherited because he kept believing in living even though he had nothing to live
One of the first examples of a decision that affected Elies life happened before the nazis even entered their town. Right from the start, Moshie the Beetle came back from being deported to warn the townspeople of what they were doing but no one believed him. In the early days they still had the
Everything is a choice. Everything is a choice, from what you got to eat in the morning to believing in God. In the book, Night by Elie Wiesel, each choice was a choice of life and death. All decisions people make change their lives forever, no matter how big or small. Elie’s lying, staying, and leaving left him to be living today, but what if.
At the beginning of the story the first decision was already made when they had chosen to ignore Moishe the Beadle’s warning of death coming to the people of Singhet. Not only did people not listen, they insisted that he only wanted their pity and he was going crazy describing the things he witnessed. Another important choice that came up was when Elie’s maid Maria Had offered the family to stay in a safe shelter away from the midst of the brewing event. However Elie did not wish to be separated from his family so his choice was to stay, in the long run it was good that he did because his father would only have himself to survive in the camp.
Elie was the only one of his family members who survived. Though Elie endured such a horrendous event, he took his experience in a positive way and made a lifestyle out
Although someone has a choice and can determine what they want, sometimes something else chooses for them. Choices can be in many things like what to eat, what to do, where to go, and more. However, sometimes people do not have a choice and are compelled to choose one idea. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie and his family get sent to a camp. While there, they think they have choices, but the Nazis and other prisoners are pushing them along.
His father needed him the most in this moment, but he left him for dead. The younger Elie would’ve sprung up in the defense of his father, after his experiences of the sons in concentration camps he decided to leave his father for a gruesome and brutal
He begins to believe that his father has become more of a burden than a comfort of home. As Elie father grows weaker in the internment camp Elie begins to question whether he should save food for himself or share with his father, whether he should stay and help his father while they are running or leave him behind as many of the other sons did. Form the reading you can see that these questions caused Elie to face quite a lot of inter turmoil. This is first revealed to the reader through his father’s beatings. On multiple occasions Wiesel, Elie’s father, received horrible beatings of then for things that Elie had done or failed to do (for example the Elie refusing to give the Forman his gold crown) even so Elie failed to do anything to help/protect his father, this seemed to be as much as a surprise to Elie as it was to the reader, as he states “my father had been struck, in front of me, and I had not even blinked.
For this reason the Elie wouldn’t have known about the extreme horror that was lying ahead for his entire family. This choice positively impacted the author’s life by not being separated from his father. “Naturally, we refused to be separated” (20). Hypothetically, if Elie left with his sisters, his father would have no motivation to survive by not knowing if his family is
The empathy he felt for his father is what drove him to stay alive, to fight for his life. Without his father, he would have given into exhaustion long before the American tanks arrived at the camp. Elie's father gave him strength, therefore giving him resilience. Strong people are resilient people; it took everything Elie had to keep himself alive. In the times he wanted so badly just to lie down, to give up it was his father's presence which kept him alive.
Three prominent choiceless choices that he made to escape the Nazi death clutches throughout his imprisonment were lying about his age, his choice to not speak out against the Kapo beating his father, and finally his ultimate decision to leave his father near death. One of the first choiceless choices Elie made while he was at Auschwitz was lying about his age, and this choice likely saved him from being automatically killed by the brutal