Eli Wiesel’s story of his experience in concentration camps in the book Night, the emotion in chapter 3 that Wiesel is trying to convey is dreary. Wiesel, who was once a light-hearted boy, loses any feelings he once had causing him to fall into a lifeless body. After being treated like animals and being scared of the unknown, Wiesel felt the world go dark, his “senses were numbed, everything was fading into a fog. We no longer clung to anything. The instincts of self-preservation, of self- defense, of pride, had all deserted us” (2). He uses descriptive language to portray his feeling of the now black world. He could no longer feel hopeful or even scared. When the guards shave his head and body, Wiesel sees that he “had become a different
One of the most significant lines in Elie Wiesel's book Night is found on page 16 when he says, 'Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed.' This line is incredibly powerful as it serves as a motif throughout the entire book, providing an overarching metaphor for Elie's journey. The phrase 'seven times cursed and seven times sealed' is a reference to the seven days of creation from the book of Genesis, and the repetition of the word 'night' implies a feeling of timelessness, as if Elie's suffering will never end. The language Wiesel uses in this quote is incredibly effective in conveying the despair and hopelessness that he felt upon arriving
“Raised in an Orthodox family in Sighet, Transylvania, Wiesel was liberated from Buchenwald at age 16. In unsentimental detail, “Night” recounts daily life in the camps — the never-ending hunger, the sadistic doctors who pulled gold teeth, the Kapos who beat fellow Jews” (Donadio). At the end of Great Depression, Hitler was slowly gaining power and he convinced lots of people that Jews were harmful and taking all the food. The Nazis went and rounded up jews and sent them to concentration camps where they would make them work. If they could not work, they would be killed.
Night, has so much detail that if feels that you are the character. Wiesel uses such detailed diction to show the humanarizing effect that the concentration camp had on him, his family, and even his fellow prisoners mate. This goes to show that Wiesel has an significant importance when writing this memoir. Wiesel had to go through all the stuff he went through in the book. To obligate us to
When the concentration camps were found, stories began to flood from them and the tales of the survivors were used to help understand the events that had occurred. Elie Wiesel was just 15-years-old when he was sent to Auschwitz, facing a daily struggle to survive and preserve his identity. Wiesel’s account of his experiences as a 15-year-old boy during the Holocaust were written in his memoir entitled Night. The memoir Night is the story about a Elie, who lived in a Jewish village and was then sent to the concentration camps. The concentration camps had changed his emotional outlook on life forever.
In Elie Wiesel's “Night” he is a young 15 year old boy going into the concentration camps not knowing what is to come from these experiences. In the book Elie Wiesel pushes through adversity during the Holocaust to find himself again in this traumatic situation. Wiesel’s cultural, physical, and geographical surroundings by the Nazi concentration camps hindered and skewed his psychological and moral trait development to becoming a human being. Elie Wiesel’s cultural situation was a mere faded blanket coming out of the camps from the Nazi demoralization techniques. Wiesel’s culture was stripped away from him at such a young age he couldn’t quite comprehend what the Nazi’s were trying to do.
Have you ever woken up not knowing if you will live to wake up again? Elie Wiesel suffered many afflictions during his time held captive in German concentration camps, from being dehumanized to starved, his experiences changed his entire life. His autobiography, Night, portrays his horrific struggles during World War II. Elie Wiesel certainly deserves his biography; out of the millions who were sent to these terrible death camps, he not only survived, but went on to inspire millions as an author, philosopher, and public speaker. Elie was a religious fifteen year old boy living in Sighet, but when his town was overtaken by the Germans, his life turned upside down.
In the memoir, “Night” Elie Wiesel discusses the theme of Dehumanization through Mistreatment in concentration camps and the loss of self-identity. The Dehumanization that Elie goes through has scarred his life forever.
Night by Elie Wiesel brings back the traumatic events of Holocaust. The true story Night begins with a twelve year old boy named Elie who lives in the small village of Sighet, Romania with his father and mother. His instructor returns from a near death experience and warns them of Nazi aggressors that will soon threaten the peacefulness of their lives. Elie and his father remain calm until they are shipped (with many other Jews) in the spring on a convoy headed for Auschwitz-Birkenau complex, a concentration camp. Elie uses metaphors of “night” to convey darkness, death, and loss of faith used as a symbol for enduring the horrible conditions and traumatic events.
These factors alone would not have guaranteed his survival, because there were people in the camps that were physically stronger, received more support from other inmates, and more determined to escape the camp, and so it was a combination of these, along with chance, that made him survive. This experience left severe psychological effects on his mind, such as a loss in his faith and symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, as a result of the inhuman treatment he received and the sickening acts of cruelty and savagery he witnessed while in the concentration camps. In order to fully understand how Elie Wiesel survived and what effects the treatment he endured in the concentration camps left on his mind, all a person has to do is read Night, an account of his experience during the Holocaust and an important primary source when understanding what the environment was like in the camps. Night was published in 1956, first translated into English in 1960 and re-translated by Elie Wisel’s wife, Marion Wiesel, in 2006.
In the novel Night Wiesel is informing the reader about the traumatizing experience that he went through in the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel was a 15- year-old Jewish boy who was sent to the concentration camp Birkenau in Auschwitz. When Wiesel arrived at camp, his first night turned into something that he will never forget. Wiesel saw the small faces of the children whose bodies were transformed into smoke under a silent sky. “Never shall I forget those moments that murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams into ashes.”
While reading it I felt like I was looking through his eyes, as if I was there with him in the camp. I felt really unsettled after reading this statement, no wonder why Wiesel lost his innocence because with it he would not have been able to survive. Wiesel did not have to go in detail about what he saw in the camps but because he did the novel resonated with me . Like Wiesel’s innocence was taken away from him he wanted to capture the terrible power that the concentration camps had over people. The way this quote is phrased shows how baffled Wiesel was when witnessing this horrid action.
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.
Evaluation of the story The novel Night, by Elie Wiesel, brings us an suspenseful autobiography written in first person of the author’s life of his life experience of long days and nights journey for a year in the Nazi concentration camps during World War II. The story goes in depth with Wiesel being taken with his father to Auschwitz, losing the faith he had in the beginning, watching his family and father slowly fading away from him which had effects on himself, and being freed from the exhaustion of labor. This novel has many characters, suspense, and a variety of figurative language to help make the book come alive.
Wiesel uses this passage from chapter 2 of his memoir, Night, to tell readers that he had gotten to a point where nothing mattered to him anymore and that he had turned himself off emotionally. We know this because he described his and the other prisoners' brains as incapable of thinking, while also mentioning that their senses were numb. This indicates that Wiesel and the other prisoners were so stunned by what they had seen in the concentration camp, Auschwitz, that they could no longer process the inhumanity of the world they were in. Their senses were numb after witnessing the inhumanity that was displayed in front of them. They had come to terms with the fact that they might die here.
Jillian Alexander Mrs. Lafferty English 11 April 24, 2023 Constant Dehumanization In Elie Wiesel’s Night, Elie went through many struggles in concentration camps along with his father. He writes about his experience and everything he was forced to go through as a teenager, including him losing his faith, constant dehumanization, and many more. The most impactful theme in the memoir was the inhumanity to man.