Mccarthyism In Night By Elie Wiesel

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Over six million Jews were brutally murdered in the Holocaust during World War II. Sadly, only very few Jews were able to survive this terrible event. Among these few was Elie Wiesel, a boy of only 13 years of age when taken by German soldiers into a concentration camp called Auschwitz. In these camps, Jews are dehumanized and stripped of everything they own and everything that they are. The story Night, by Elie Wiesel, portrays the awful life that all Jews endured during their time in Auschwitz. In this story, the suffering of the Jews is witnessed as the prisoners struggle to survive. From deportation within the cattle cars to the acceptance of limited rations, the prisoners physically deteriorate into corpse-like beings which readers observe …show more content…

After years of agony in concentration camps, a resistance movement finally decides to act. Thankfully, the movement overcomes the German soldiers and everyone has now escaped the chains of Auschwitz. The Jews are now free of all their torment. Three days after this revolution, Wiesel has become very ill and is transferred to a hospital. When Wiesel is recovering, he decides to get up and look in a mirror that is across the room from him. As the young boy gazes into the mirror, the book states, “From the depths of the mirror, a corpse was contemplating me. The look in his eyes as he gazed at me has never left me”(Wiesel, 115). For three burdensome years, Elie Wiesel has worked in concentration camps. Every single task he completes is an effort to keep himself alive. With little food and little to drink, Wiesel slowly transforms into a slender boy who weighs no more than 80 pounds. Showers that are not regular will turn him into a filthy boy who no clean person would want to be around. And as Wiesel glances into the mirror for the first time in three years, he sees the true effect of Auschwitz on his body. Weisel notices the legitimate torture which he has endured. Undoubtedly, the mirror Weisel stares into at the end of this novel accurately depicts the never-ending torture he has

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