Night Elie Wiesel Research Paper

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Night is a mournful, bitter, heartbreaking memoir of Elie Wiesel during the Holocaust. Holocaust was the attempted execution of the Jewish race under the leadership of Adolf Hitler during the second world war. Hitler blamed the Jews for the cause of the Great Depression in Germany and so he promised to annihilate the Jewish race by leading the Nazi soldiers. Jews all around Europe were gathered in concentration camps and were starved to death, burned and overworked. Many Jewish children were left orphans and killed. Wiesel and his family were forced out of their homes in Sighet, Romania, to concentration camps in Auschwitz. In the camp, Wiesel and his father were separated from his mom and sisters. The Jews were forced to work from morning …show more content…

After he got to the concentration camp, he saw deaths and his people being executed. He started to question God why was allowing these horrible things to happened to the Jews out of all the people on Earth. One time, he felt revolt against God for the first time. He said, “for the first time, I felt revolt rise up in me. Why should I bless his name? The Eternal Lord of the universe, the All-Powerful and terrible, was silent. What had I to thank him for.”(Wiesel/31) His faith in God began to be shaken. He felt anger against God. The people around him were also losing faith in their religion. An old rabbi told him "It is the end. God is no longer with us."(Wiesel/73) This might affect him more because the man was a rabbi, and him seeing a rabbi losing faith in God might impact him more. Rabbis are supposed to be the leader and to support and teach to have faith in God. Furthermore, Wiesel didn't want to fast anymore. He said, " I did not fast, mainly to please my father, who had forbidden me to do so. But further, there was no longer any reason why I should fast. I no longer accepted God's silence."(Wiesel/66) Elie didn't want to fast anymore during Yom Kippur. He felt anger against God because of the silence. He no longer wanted to practice the religion. He began to see it as useless things, unlike in the beginning of the story when he did the practices very

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