Karla Galindo Michelle Stewart Summer English 14 July 2023 Night: Elie Wiesel Dehumanization means to deprive a person of their basic rights and to treat them as inferior and less-than human. Throughout his memoir Night, Elie Wiesel, illustrates how Hitler and his Nazis dehumanize the Jews in their quest to annihilate them. Due to the horrific and inhumane ways in which the Nazis seek to torture and exterminate the Jews, the Jews lose both faith in their God and compassion for one another. The Jews begin to lose faith in their God, their religion, due to the brutal and savage treatment of them in the hands of Hitler’s Nazis. For example, when Moishe the Beadle, a man who Elie discusses religion with, witnesses the horrors of a camp that shoots
Have you ever wondered what it is like to be in a concentration camp,or what it is like to be a Jew while Hitler is starting to take control over you and your family? Hitler's number one thing that he wanted to do was kill all Jews. In the book Night, Nazis gradually reduced the Jews to nothing more than things because they hated all Jews. In Night, the author Elie Wiesel tells about his experiences in a concentration camp. Many of the experiences Elie shared with the readers of this book explains how the Nazis dehumanized his father, his fellow Jews and himself.
Hannah Taulealea Ms.Wilson Block 2: Night Essay rough draft 19 April 2017 Inhumanity to Humans In the heart-rending and powerful book Night by Eli Wiesel, inhumanity and great mistreatment toward the people of the Jewish religion during the times of the Holocaust are described throughout using stylistic elements such as: Imagery and figurative language. Eli Wiesel incorporates these elements often in his book which helps the readers to understand the idea of inhumanity quite clearly. Imagery is used strongly in this book and it’s especially shown at many points during. It helps to aid the reader’s thought process and imagination of what happened in the story by using specifics such as words and phrases to help one
In chapter six of Night, many visual images create a distinctive picture in the head of the reader. These images dehumanize the prisoners and allow the reader to gain a deeper understanding of Elie’s mentality. To begin, one of these images describes the Jewish people while they are being forced to run. Throughout this passage, Wiesel compares them to machines. For instance, he once states, “I was putting one foot in front of the other, like a machine” (Wiesel 85).
Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night recounts the horrific experiences he encountered throughout the mass extermination and exploitation of Jews and other ‘undesirable’ minorities in an event known as the Holocaust. Throughout the duration of novel Wiesel confronts various traumatic sights and circumstances which are highly disturbing and force him to reevaluate his beliefs and abandon parts of himself in order to survive. In this passage he has recently arrived at Auschwitz and is experiencing his first night in the camp where he talks about the impact this ordeal has on him from this day on. A central idea in the novel and excerpt is dehumanization, which is further developed with the use of repetition. These experiences have an enormous impact
Dehumanization in Night “Bread, soup- these were my whole life. I was a body. Perhaps less than even: a starved stomach. The stomach alone was aware of the passage of time” (64). In the novel Night by Elie Wiesel explains the torture the Jews had to go through.
Elie Wiesel’s novel, Night, is a memoir that describes the horrific experiences of both Elie and other Jews. Elie’s journey is largely about a loss of innocence, faith, and family. Elie Wiesel’s purpose in ending his memoir by describing what he saw as he looked at himself in the mirror was to demonstrate how he was emotionally dead from his experiences. To begin with, Wiesel’s emotional death was created by the dehumanization he and other Jews experienced. Perhaps, the scene that most reveals the dehumanization of Wiesel and his fellow Jews was a scene where a starved man kills his father for a piece of bread.
The memoir Night written by Eliezer (Elie) Wiesel takes place in Europe between the years 1941-1945. During this time, Europe was involved in World War II. Germany was under Adolf Hitler’s rule and he desired to expand across Europe. Along with that, he implemented policies that allowed for the persecution and genocide of Jews. Jewish people were thrown into concentration camps where they were dehumanized in multiple ways, for example, deprivation of necessities, grueling forced labor, and brutal treatment.
Since 1945, the word holocaust has been taken under a horrifying meaning, the mass murder of over 6 million European Jews by the German Nazi during World War II. Elie Wiesel, a global activist, recounts the setting of a portion of his timeline. From Sighet to Auschwitz, Wiesel and his fellow Jews experienced reduction in their personal freedom as if it were dehumanization. “the same day, the Hungarian police burst into every Jewish home in town: a Jew was henceforth forbidden to own gold, jewelry, or any valuables. Everything had to be handed over to the authorities, under penalty of death.”
Due to this fatal flaw, when facing injustice it is crucial to abandon our instincts for the benefit of the greater good. The Holocaust was based on dehumanizing processes that had the potential for much greater impact than even intended by the Nazis. The exploitation of human psychology was so extreme that the brutalizing truth had the possibility to destroy many people’s faith in the world. At one point in Night, Elie Wiesel describes himself in the following way, “ I was nothing but a body.
Aiden Toms Mrs. S Chernishenko ELA B 30 April 27, 2023 Survival and Triumph of The Human Spirit Night, written by Elie Wiesel, is a memoir that thoroughly explains the psychological damage that Jewish citizens experienced during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel, better known as Eliezer throughout the memoir, explains the different torturous events he, as well as other Jews, had to experience during Adolf Hitler’s reign. When the Germans put Jews into Ghettos, most of them were in denial and thought something this cruel could not possibly be happening. However, as time passed, reality set in for the Jews and they concluded that this was truly happening and that this was only the beginning. Jews were then stripped of their faith and identity to be
Night Response Throughout the story Night I have learned so much about the three types of dehumanization. The three types of dehumanization are mental, physical, and emotional. They all affect humans in some sort of way and I got the experience of the reading this book by Elie Wiesel and learning about them.
Hannah Patterson 23 March 2023 Honors English 10 Period 3 Dead Inside and Out During the Holocaust, Adolf Hitler led Nazi Germany to kill approximately six million European Jews. Millions of Jews were tortured in harsh concentration camps for years as they fought for liberation. However, survival following this genocide was traumatic and difficult because most prisoners had lost most aspects of their lives. After Elie Wiesel’s liberation in Night, his life would be forever different because he has lost all of his family and all of his happiness.
Joe Shmoe Mr. Dai English 10H Period 5 17 February 2023 2 Body Paragraphs + Introduction In her diary, Anne Frank wrote that “a single candle can both defy and define the darkness.” This powerful observation resonates with the darkness interwoven in Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, in which he recounts his experiences as a Jew who survived the Nazi concentration camps. Throughout the autobiography, Elie displays prominent psychological patterns to explain how Jews allowed human atrocities to occur, using characters such as Akiba Drummer to make the intent of Jewish genocide clear. In Night, Wiesel explains how learned helplessness and Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs can explain human atrocities, using Akiba Drummer’s death and Elie’s downfall as examples.
Dehumanization In the novel, Night, Elie Wiesel tells his story of his survival throughout the horrible event of the Holocaust, where inhumane treatment of Jews shattered their faith in humanity and hope. The Jews were stripped of their nature and were treated like meaningless humans, their purpose and existence meaning nothing to the Nazis as they were seen as nothing but a nuisance. Ridden of their names, soon known as numbers, and having to have seen the atrocities these Jews were exposed to was unreasonable and horrid treatment. Because of this extreme dehumanization that occurred during this time, it serves today as a way to remember those whose lives were taken and to impact society on how such behavior against harmless people can devastate
During World War I, Hitler’s ability to command his ideas led many, “refugees to be considered as victims of political persecution rather than race or religion” (Aish 1). The holocaust depicts the horrors that can occur if negative ideas are conveyed. Jewish citizens were forced to endure disturbing practices and inhumane treatment as a result of Adolf Hitler’s biased intentions. Elie Wiesel, a prisoner in the German concentration camps had his, “God, soul, and dreams turned into ashes” (Wiesel 221). As a result of one dictator’s negative viewpoint, Jewish people lived through a nightmare.