Hitler’s Holocaust slaughtered millions of innocent groups deemed unfavorable by the Nazi state, led by Adolf Hitler. The purging of millions of Jews, homosexuals, Soviets, disabled people and gypsies in concentration camps stands today as one of the greatest atrocities. Upon entering a concentration camp, a prisoner’s main concern becomes survival. Although most prisoners faced death, some were spared due to extenuating circumstances, for instance, musicians. It can be said that during the Holocaust, musicians had a better chance for survival than the rest of the camp’s inhabitants. Musicians auditioned to join Nazi-organized orchestras and perform for the soldiers, hoping that this would provide a light at the end of this very dark tunnel. …show more content…
For many of the orchestra members, “the violin was a comforter in mankind’s darkest hour”. During their time spent in captivity, musicians were able to work in unison with other prisoners, bonding over their shared predicament through the vibratos of classical music. This redemption through music can be seen in Elie Wiesel’s Night through the character Juliek. Many of the musicians, like Juliek, felt as if their “soul were the bow”, and their “life was gliding on the strings”. Despite the fears of what was occurring around them, the musicians focused on the sheet music to get lost in their senses: envisions of their lost hopes, charred pasts and extinguished future filled their minds, but they expressed these fears instead by playing as if they would never play again. During the Holocaust, music served as a liberator for many Jewish musicians, providing comfort in the darkest of hours for many. The spirit of music can be seen during the Holocaust, as it is through the Nazi-organized orchestras that members could unite together with a shared strength emerging from the unimaginable experience. The musicians of the Holocaust played for not only their survival, but in spirit of those who perished. The musicians time spent in the concentration camps were less calamitous than other prisoners, as they could escape into the music, due to their involvement in the Nazi-organized
In Night, the theme is loss. This is illustrated in the text by telling us about how some people lost their things. Many people lost many of their belongings such as family members, teeth, homes, and personal belongings. In the beginning of the story, Elie lost his home because he and his family were forced to go to a concentration camp and work.
The small town of Sighet, also known as Sighetu Marmatiei, is located today in Transylvania, Romania. Through the years, Sighet has had strong ties to the Jewish religion, just as it does today. The town has been part of both Romania and Hungary at times, and has seen a decreasing number of residents since 1944. During the 1940s, anti-Jewish sentiment was at its peak, with Adolf Hitler being the face of the anti-Jewish movement. By 1944, World War I had started, and more than 14,000 Jews resided in Sighet, but by the end of May of the same year, none remained, and Sighet was comparable to a ghost town.
As the well-known 20th century Indian peacemaker Mahatma Gandhi had once said, “An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.” Although, Gandhi was probably rebuking his fellow Indians as they longed for revenge against the oppressive British, this civil rights leader could have been scolding the Germans under Hitler’s dictatorship during the 2nd World War in Night, an autobiography by Eliezer Wiesel. During the teenage lives of young Eliezer, he experiences numerous inhuman horrors. In addition, his entire family is deported from Sighet, Hungary to the Auschwitz concentration camp with thousands of other Jews. Many more of these deportations happened at about the same time, changing the entire Jewish culture and history for years to come.
"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," Elie Wiesel wrote of his experience in a Jewish concentration camp. There are many misconceptions about what happens inside concentration camps therefore, much has been written on the subject. Night by Eliezer Wiesel, In My Hands by Jennifer Armstrong, and "German Concentration Camps" by the CIA are three texts written about concentration camps during WWII. Each discusses what happened to prisoners during the war as well as ways prisoners survived these dehumanizing institutions. Prisoners who lived in concentration camps during the Holocaust used perseverance and faith to survive the violence
Hardships, Relationships, and a Harbour of Issues Often in stories and in real life the environments of a situation can affect people's experience and how they relate to other people. Positive experiences usually affect relationships in a positive manner. Likewise, bad experiences affect relationships in a negative manner. In Night, a memoir by Elie Wiesel, the setting creates significant hardship for the characters which changes their relationship with others. The concentration camps, the physical man-made setting of Night, are dark and muddy.
“ You don 't need religion to have morals. If you can 't determine right from wrong, then you lack empathy not religion. ”- unknown. Night by Elie Wiesel, during World War II, in Germany and Poland, Jewish people taken to concentration camps and forced to do labor.
The road to a relationship with God is not straight, it is ever changing with challenges and curves and ups and downs. This is a main theme in the memoir Night, by Elie Wiesel, where Elie has a struggling relationship with God. He thinks that God has abandoned him and his dad so he does not feel the need to continue his relationship with God. Elie was excited about his faith but the holocaust makes him feel angry and confused with God. Elie 's faith excites him from a young age and he wants to learn more about God.
In the novel Night, the word night contained great significance and has very deep meaning. Elie’s memory of everything in this time period is dark and tragic. It is called Night to show what he felt like during this whole time period, and it felt like one long, painful night to him. Night represents the pain, fear, death, and darkness from Elie’s past. “We stared at the flames in the darkness.
In the novel Night, the word night ironically is a motif, appearing again and again throughout the novel. One of its many appearances occurs near the beginning of the novel when Elie and his family are going to move into a smaller ghetto. “It was to be the last night spent in our house.” It next appears on the train when they hear that Aushwitz will be their last destination and that conditions were good. “Suddenly we felt free of the previous nights’ terror.”
Eyes are described as “the windows to the soul” in many works. In Night, a memoir by Elie Wiesel, it is a common motif. The book focuses on the story of Eliezer, a young boy, during the bulk of the Holocaust. It tells how he made it through the first days in the concentration camp and all of the tragedy that occurred during his experience there. Throughout the novel, the author uses eyes to describe the emotions and feelings of many of the novel’s characters.
When Felix was eleven his uncle taught him how to play the cello, even though he was clumsy and his uncle was impatient. “I had a very happy childhood. It came to an end too soon and too abruptly, thanks to Adolf Hitler. ”(Weinberg 10).Hitler said “Nature is cruel; therefore we are also entitled to be cruel. When I send
“Despite the growing darkness, I could see my father turn pale.” (Pg. 12) “We would no longer have to look at all those hostile faces, endure those hate-filled stares. No more fear. No more anguish.”
Setting in Night In the story Night the author uses figurative language to help describe and visualize the setting. In the story the Jewish people have to leave their possessions and this quote helps describe and visualize the setting. First the following quote helps describe the setting using a simile. “Our backyard looked like a marketplace. Valuable objects precious rugs, silver candlesticks, Bibles and other ritual objects were strewn over the dusty grounds- pitiful relics that seemed never to have had a home.
‘Isnt it funny how day by day nothing changes, but when you look back. Everything is different’ Quote by C.S Lewis Night by Elie Wiesel, gives out more of a gruesome setting while Elie himself describes his whole horrifying experience of the Holocaust. Do we know how that big of a darkening impact can change a normal human being to someone we all won 't even recognize? Page by page of this novel Elie adjusted differently emotionally, physically, and spiritually from beginning, middle and end.
Martin Luther King Jr. once said, "We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope. " Hope and an optimistic attitude are characteristics of a rational and humane mindset. Documenting how these ideals change throughout a period of time in writing can be done through various means of rhetoric including figurative language. In Elie Wiesel 's personal memoir Night, he incorporates similes and metaphors to effectively convey how the victims ' humanity deteriorated throughout the course of the Holocaust. Wiesel 's figurative language at the beginning of the novel conveys how the Jewish people followed commendable politesse and practiced reasonable behavior early on in the Holocaust.