In the memoir Night by Elie Weisel written 10 years ago in 1955 is about how Hitler was trying to exterminate all the jews by taking them to concentration camps and treating them subhumanly if you will and how Elie Weisel was tortured and dehumanized there are many ways they were dehumanized but let’s start from the beginning. In chapter 2 of this memoir they were being moved to a concentration camp in a cattle car. In the cattle car there was no room for you to lay down with 80 people in one car. Also in the car they also had very little food and water and were trying to preserve their resources but despite not having very many resources they had a really good country side view. Another thing that was in the car was a woman whose name …show more content…
I don’t think that it was very fair that they wanted them to do all of this work and only eat bread and soup. Even though he wanted them to suffer while doing it I still think that was a little harsh. In the camps there is a job to where you have to load dead bodies into a fire pit which is pretty gross but it’s part of their torture and the people in charge of the camps didn’t care one bit about being cruel. According to the article” Soup, stale bread, black coffee” were all they were allowed to eat. There is one more way they were dehumanized, let me show you. The last dehumanizing thing that they did to the jews was making them put dead bodies into a fire pit. In the camps there is a job to where you have to load dead bodies into a fire pit which is pretty gross but it’s part of their torture and the people in charge of the camps didn’t care one bit about being cruel. "Remember it always, let it be graven in your memories. You are in Auschwitz. And Auschwitz is not a convalescent home. It is a concentration camp. Here, you must work. If you don't you will go straight to the chimney. To the crematorium. Work or crematorium—the choice is yours." That is three ways the jews were treated
These camps show many circumstances of inhumanity. The prisoners were so malnourished that Wiesel even writes, “I was nothing but a body, perhaps even less: a
Ava G. Mendez Mr. Strack English 9 February 5th, 2023 In the book, “Night” Jewish people in concentration camps were treated with unfathomable cruelty. It shows the true story and sad reality of young Elie and his struggles in the concentration camps. Prisoners were often beaten for no reason, deprived of food, and treated in the most inhumane ways possible.
The novel Night written by Elie Wiesel, a Jewish man who lived through the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, tells this man’s sad story and what he went through as a young child. At many moments in the story it is possible to see how the living conditions of the Jewish community deteriorated as the war went on. One of the main aspects of the Nazi’s plan to rid the planet of the Jews was to break them mentally, mainly by slowly taking their humanity from them. Treating them like animals was one of the ways that the Nazis would dehumanize the Jewish victims. As if they were cattle, they were referred to as numbers instead of names as if they were not even human anymore.
In the article “Concentration Camps 1933-1939” the topic of Jewish Concentration camps was disgusted. The people in concentration camps were forced to work with no reward or pay off
Some of the Jews that survived at Auschwitz were liberated. Auschwitz was a killing center for the jews or others that the Nazis were against. Called the undesirables. Some punishments and executions they used were shooting, hanging, starvation to death, and the post. The text states, “The victim’s hands were tied behind his back and he was hung from a post so that his feet could not touch the ground.
Once the Jewish people reached the concentration camps, they were typically immediately separated by gender. Women and girls were almost always immediately executed, and boys and men would then go through a “selection” process, where the old, sick, and disabled–those who would be unable to work–were separated from their peers (“Auschwitz”). Wiesel had left his mother and sisters soon after arriving in Auschwitz “in a fraction of a second” with “no time to think” and continued onward with his father in disarray and confusion (29). Those selected to be unfit for work would be killed by being gassed, shot, or thrown into a crematorium to be burned. After witnessing human beings, notably babies, being sent to the crematorium, Wiesel “felt anger rising within”
In the book Night, Elie Wiesel shares his story about the Holocaust; he was held prisoner in a concentration camp as the actions of the Nazis create a horrifying tone. On arrival to Auschwitz, passengers on the train including Elie smelt burning flesh, the quote that shows this is “The smell of burning flesh” (28) which is a form of synesthesia . This was the first piece of evidence that inferred that so horrifying was going on. The Nazis were already burning and gassing people before they arrived at Auschwitz. One day the Nazis hung a child in front of 10,000 prisoners, the Nazis wanted to show the Jewish people that they were not scared to punish or kill them.
I walk my way into what is most famously known as Auschwitz concentration camp. As I enter the cruel gates I notice something at the top of the poles. Arbeit macht frei sits upon the gates of Auschwitz, “work sets you free”. As I start making my way farther into the camp I automatically notice the awful smell. It was not no ordinary bad smell; it was the smell of burning bodies.
Thousands of Jewish prisoners were killed per day in concentration camps. The way the Nazis succeeded in killing this much Jews was by creating gas chambers and crematoriums. First, in the novel night, Elie Wiesel described how he witnessed dozens of “children being thrown into the flames.” Wiesel was told when he arrived to Auschwitz that “Here, you must work. If you don’t you will go straight to the chimney.
For many people during WWII, life in concentration camps was a cruel and unjust fate. Before we dive into this topic, it is important to define what a concentration camp is. A concentration camp is defined as a guarded compound for the detention or imprisonment of aliens, members of ethnic minorities, political opponents, radical or pacifist groups, etc. Its savage conditions and inhumane treatment of innocent victims left an indelible mark on their souls. The prisoners' physical suffering was only matched by the psychological torture they endured: starvation, sleep deprivation, overcrowding and substandard living quarters, incessant labor for little pay, and no freedom to move around.
During World War II there were moments throughout history that we see as crucial and have left an impact on the world today. In this writing the past will be revisited to recognize the Holocaust and look through the experiences of the Nazi’s concentration camps. Daily life for the prisoners in the early WWII Nazi concentration camps was often met with tiring and dreadful days. The Nazis would target various groups of people like Jewish people, political enemies, and many other groups of people. These prisoners would be forced to do execrable things like forced labor and torture.
Because of the secrecy surrounding the Nazi German concentration camps, the world knew very little of the tragic events happening in Germany until after the war, and since then, literature recounting personal experiences in the concentration camps has been crucial to our understanding of the cruelty that took place. Starvation, beatings, medical experimentation, and death were prevalent throughout the concentration camps for Jews, Gypsies, mentally and physically disabled persons, and prisoners of war in order to “cleanse” the German population and create a superior race without disease or deformities. In order to survive these casualties, prisoners clung to life in any way possible, even if it meant another should die. In “This Way for Gas,
“Newly arrived persons classified by the SS physicians as unfit for labor were sent to the gas chambers: these included the ill, the elderly, pregnant women and children.” (“Auschwitz-Birkenau: History & Overview.”). The hours were long and hard. They worked at least 11 hours a day building the camp. (“Auschwitz-Birkenau: Living Conditions, Labor &
Weisell explains what life was like in a concentration camp; “ Hunger- thirst- fear- transport- selection- fire- chimney: these words all have intrinsic meaning, but in those times they meant something else (Weisellix).” The Jews were treated not as humans because they were not viewed as such in the eyes of the Nazi’s.
An article written in the first and third person by a Holocaust survivor goes on to describe the living conditions of the concentration camp he had unpleasantly had to stay at. "There were so many prisoners," he says. "We were in a big barrack, it had a concrete floor, it had no beds. And we were lined up like herring on the floor, so when one person turned, everybody else had to turn, it was so tight." (Nelson, A Holocaust Survivor, Spared From Gas Chamber By Twist Of Fate)