78 years ago, an event that killed millions occurred, known as the Holocaust. It involved German Nazis torturing and mass murdering European Jews over the span of about 12 years. Although there are many stories and novels about the Holocaust, one stands apart from the others. The title of this book is “Night”, by Elie Wiesel. In this short novel, Wisiel tells the story of his life as a teen boy living in fear of the Nazis and his traumatizing experiences. Some of the main topics he explores are faith, survival, and dehumanization, which were all a big part in his novel. It is important for readers to understand these topics as they go throughout the book because it gives an insight on just how cruel the Holocaust was to people. One topic Wiesel addresses in Night is Survival. The theme he develops around this topic is that people will do anything to survive in times of fear. This is seen when the reader learns that Rabbi Elihu’s son abandoned his father because he felt that he was making him weaker and dragging him down, so he left him in order to survive. On pg. 91, Elizer realizes why Rabbi Eliahu's son abandoned him ¨What …show more content…
There are many examples of dehumanization in Night as Elizer and other Jews are treated atrociaously in the camps. One example of dehumanization in Night can be found on pg. 37, where Elizer states “In a few seconds, we had ceased to be men.” This quote shows how sudden and drastic the Nazis treated them, and how they viewed them as animals, livestock, instead of humans. Another example of dehumanization can be found on pg. 41 where Elizer says “Those were the first human words.”, after the Nazis told them to go to sleep. This quote implies that every other time the Naizs spoke to them, they spoke to them like they were not human or equal to them. These themes both show that the Nazis treated them not as humans, but rather as lesser beings in order to make torturing them
Throughout the novel Night and throughout the history of the holocaust, Nazis dehumanized Jewish prisoners with both language and actions. Nazis treated Jewish prisoners like animals; when they behaved well, they were rewarded with extra soup or bread and when they misbehaved, they were physically tortured or even killed. They were also referred to as numbers rather than names. This is shown when Elie Wiesel states, “I never felt anything except the lashes of the whip... Only the first really hurt,” (Wiesel 57).
Night by Elie Wiesel shines a light on the horrors that the Holocaust brought to millions of Jews and other minorities in Europe in the 1940’s. The Holocaust has many survivors with countless of different stories to tell, however, no other story is as quite in depth and horrific as Elie Wiesel’s. Wiesel wrote this book to inform the world about how awful his experiences were, and to make sure that we felt empathy for the victims and that we would never forget. Night covers just one man's horrendous experiences in the Holocaust, the Holocaust as a whole nevertheless, was single handedly, the largest example of Genocide in World History. We must never forget about these victims and always show Empathy towards them always.
The Nazis dehumanize and mistreat the Jews in the book Night by Elie Weisel. The Nazis use effective tactics to oppress and degrade the Jews. They reduce them to nothing and small beings that had no identity. The Nazis took the Jews from a person to an object without a face and made them feel hidden. The Nazis handled the Jews as though they were less than dirt, less than human.
The Rabbi’s son wanted to live and not die because of his father inability to keep up. Although Elie didn’t like the fact that he lied to Rabbi about not seeing his son, he rather not tell the humble father how his last, surviving family tried ditching him and end up dying in the march. The action of the Rabbi’s son taught Elie to never leave Chlomo behind even if his own father may reduce his survival chance. This allowed Elie to become a stronger individual and also a better son. Because in the beginning, Chlomo protected Elie and held a strong wall for the both of them.
The dehumanization of the Jews Dehumanization was a cruel weapon that happened to the Jewish civilians during the Holocaust in Elie Wiesel’s, Night. How were the Jews being dehumanized? They were starved, forced to march, forced into cattle cars, beaten, malnourished, and had their rights taken away. However, that was the “normal” treatment for a Jew. It was normal to beat innocent humans, it was normal to starve them, and it was normal to make sure that they had no happiness.
Throughout the book Night, by Elie Wiesel, Wiesel goes through a lot of changes as he and his father are put through torture in concentration camps. When Wiesel was fifteen he was separated from his mother and sisters when they were being grouped into camps. For about a year Wiesel, along with everyone else in the camps, is stripped of humane treatment. They are dehumanized to the point where they are treated like objects. Wiesel is dehumanized and is no longer treated as a human with feelings, but as an object that doesn't deserve a life.
Millions of people were brutally abused by the Nazis, forcing them to resort to beastly ways. Hitler, the Nazi party leader, had a master plan of dehumanizing and crushing the entire Jewish population. Until the liberation of the Jews, he had a successful run. Hitler dehumanized Jews by way of starvation, physical abuse, and verbal abuse. This theme can be seen very clearly in “Night” by Elie Weisel.
In Elie Wiesel's memoir "Night," the theme of dehumanization is a constant presence. The story of the Holocaust is one of the most poignant examples of the devastating effects of dehumanization, and "Night" provides a firsthand account of how the Jews were stripped of their humanity by the Nazi regime. The dehumanization of the Jews was a crucial aspect of the Holocaust, and it played a critical role in helping Hitler achieve his ultimate goal of extermination. The dehumanization of the Jews began long before they were sent to the concentration camps.
Dehumanization can be defined as demonizing the enemy or making someone seem less than human and unworthy of humane treatment. However, in the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, dehumanization has a more significant meaning. Throughout the memoir, the Nazis not only dehumanize the Jewish people but also take their identity, family, and values. They steal their clothes, shave their hair, remove their names, and force them to fight against each other like wolves for just a crust of bread merely for their amusement. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie is dehumanized by having his name taken away from him, and having his head shaved making him look the same as everyone around him, which causes Eliezer to question death, give up hope and give up faith in himself and others around him.
Dehumanization is the process of stripping a person or group of their human qualities by denying their humanness. Night is a memoir written by Eliezer Wiesel, who in the memoir explains what he has to go through every step of the way to his freedom. He is one of the many Jews who are being dehumanized by the Nazis in multiple, cruel, and different ways. These ways include the Jews being poorly treated, being referred to as rats, being constantly beaten, having to work in poor conditions, and scapegoating the Jews. Eliezer and the other Jews do not deserve such punishments because they had committed no wrongdoing.
In Elie Wiesel's memoir Night the idea of dehumanization is presented in the way the jews are treated. They are abused by the Nazi's multiple ways to tourture them. Dehumanization means to be stripped of your rights as a human. These cruel and evil events started with taking everything unique about you. Your clothes, hair, name, and family.
Night, an autobiography that was written by Elie Wiesel, is from his perspective as a prisoner. The book focuses on Wiesel and his father experiencing the torture that the Nazis put them through, and the unspeakable events that Wiesel witnessed. The author, Wiesel, was one of the handfuls of survivors to be able to tell his time about the appalling incidents that occurred during the Holocaust. That being the case, in the memoir Night, Wiesel uses somber descriptive diction, along with vivid syntax to portray the dehumanizing actions of the Nazis and to invoke empathy to the reader.
Throughout Night, dehumanization consistently took place as the tyrant Nazis oppressed the Jewish citizens. The Nazis targeted the Jews' humanity, and slowly dissolved their feeling of being human. The feeling of dehumanization was very common between the jews. They were constantly being treated as in they were animals. The author and narrator Elie Wiesel, personally experienced being treated like an animal
In Night one of the ways that the Jews were dehumanized was by abuse. There were beatings, “I never felt anything except the lashes of the whip... Only the first really hurt.” (Wiesel, 57) “They were forced to dig huge trenches. When they had finished their work, the men from the Gestapo began theirs.
In many ways, Nazis had physically, mentally, and emotionally dehumanized their victims. The Jews were treated so badly by the Nazis that they felt as if they weren’t even humans; they felt like animals. For example, the Jewish prisoners were always being yelled at with harsh tones. Eliezer only remembers one time when a Polish