Being the last sentence of the book, and out of all the passages I highlighted this one stood out to me and described Wiesel’s experience in just a few simple sentence. He looked at himself for the first time in many years, and did not recognize himself he saw a different person. This showed me that the concentration camps changed him he was a different person inside and out. The events that occurred to him had scared him so much that the man he saw in the mirror wasn’t him, but one who had been drained of life that looked lifeless from the events occurred in the concentration camps. He was weak and this whole passage embodies his weakness and the whole point of the concentration camps.
In the book Night, we the readers witness the hardships and struggles in Elie’s life during the traumatic holocaust. The events that take place in this story are unbearable and are thought to be demented in modern times. In the beginning Elie is shown as a normal teenage Jewish boy, but the events are so drastic that we the readers forget how he was like in the beginning. Changes were made to Elie during the book, whether they were minor or major. The changes generated from himself, the journey, and other people.
In the novel, Night, by Elie Wiesel, Elie has to go through many challenges to find the light in the darkness. While he was in the concentration camps, he was overworked, starved, and at many times he came close to the face of death. Elie had very few things that kept him going, but the few that did were very important to him. His father, faith, and his hopeful spirit were a few of the things that kept him going through the hard times.
This passage in the book, Night by Elie Wiesel, explains the adversity and troubles of a death march, that they were forced to go on from Auschwitz to a still unknown location. In this death march Elie, his father, and thousands upon thousands of other Jews and “non-important” cultures of people take on the challenge of a 42 mile death march, in the harsh, cold, German winter; all that fell behind were killed. This is not the only death march that took place during the Holocaust, there were many many more that took the lives of thousands of Jews, for instance the Dachau and the Bataan death marches. While in the concentration camp one day the meisters required the prisoners to clean the camp from corner to corner so that when the liberating
One phenomenon, one dictator, and one country would change the life of a fifteen year old Jew forever. Stripped of his home in Transylvania and forced on copious deportation trains traveling to multiple concentration camps, Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night explores the treacherous and horrific life of a Jew during the Holocaust. Through the traumatizing punishments and lifestyle of concentration camps, a faithful and loyal boy metamorphosed into a selfish and unfaithful man. Early on in his childhood, Elie was immensely devoted to his faith, so far as “...finding a master... in the person of Moishe the Beadle”(Wiesel 4). To have a master meant that he would have a religious mentor to help him study Kabbalah, thus allowing him to interpret the Bible for himself.
In “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Hitler was not only trying to exterminate the Jews, but he was also trying to make them feel like they were less of a person than the people around them. He felt that the Jews were a bother to the Germans more than anything. He tortured them to the point that they wanted to pick on the person next to them so that person would look worse than themselves. Hitler’s job was to make the humans feel like they were nothing but a piece of dirt along the path that he would walk on to success. Hitler knows exactly how he will make the Jews feel like they are not humans.
The number of Jews that died during the Holocaust was about 7 million, which could be compared to the entire state of Washington's population. Elie Wiesel the famous author of Night a Holocaust memoir and Holocaust survivor who lost all he once had, he was one of the few that made it to their release day. Elie lost his family and friends, as they were separated at the gate of the concentration camp. Elie and his father remained together for the majority of their Holocaust experience and they shared one main goal, the common goal was to survive.
In this passage of Elie Wiesel's memoir, Night, the prisoners of the camp are forced to watch the death of a young boy, who is being hanged for having worked against the Nazi's. As the pipel hung from the noose, Elizer was forced to ponder the question "Where is God?" The despairing tone is revealed through each sentence of this passage, however Elizer's answer is what truly fortifies the hopeless tone- " Here he is- He is hanging here on the gallows.
In the book Night the author uses repetition to create a tone in the passage, and that tone the author is trying to create is sadness. Elie shows sadness/disbelief in the book when he realizes that he might lose his life in the concentration camp. In the book we realize the author is using a phrase over and over again(repetition)to show a tone in the book, and the phrase he uses to show the tone is “Never shall I forget”. He uses the phrase and thinks back to things he would never forget because he realizes he might die in the concentration camps and this starts to create the tone of sadness. On page 34 it said “I thought: This is what the antechamber of hell must look like.
Strength of Love Scared and afraid wanting to die, but the only thing keeping you from giving up and dying is the love of your family. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie is just a normal 15- year-old boy when him and his family are taken to Birkenau a concentration camp in Poland. When Elie and his family were taken to Birkenau Elie and his dad is separated from his mom and his sisters never to see them again. After Elie and his dad are separated from the girls Elie and his father find it very difficult to survive in the camp, they just want to give up and die but the their love for each other kept them going. In Night the author uses imagery to help convey the message of family bonds.
The nonfiction memoir genre is important to memorialize historical events like the holocaust because the memoir allows the reader to feel like they are inside the story, it grows the reader's sympathy and it educates the readers about the holocaust so they begin to understand things they didn't know before. Especially in the memoir Night, Wiesel decries the events accurately and describes in great detail the horrific sights he had witnessed and experienced. In chapter eight, Elie watches his father die, then when he wakes up he sees in his father's bunk “another invalid”(Wiesel 106). After withstanding this, Wiesel “did not weep” (Wiesel 106) but he admits that he had a shameful moment of relief. This allows the reader to walk the path of
Life in concentration camps brought the struggle between life and death, so Wiesel writes Night to share about his experience in a life or death situation he encountered with his father during one of the selections they went through. Wiesel starts out by saying,“The roll call was shorter than usual. The evening soup was distributed at great speed, swallowed as quickly. We were anxious.” As time went on, the conditions in the concentration camps began to grow more dreadful.
The memoir entitled “Night” is the story of the fight for survival. It’s Elie Wiesel’s story of his fight to survive along with his fellow Jews in the Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps. Elie’s personal account of this story is both heart wrenching and effective. Hearing Elie’s personal anguish brings the story to life. It’s the story of how people can survive with the barest of means.
Throughout the memoir, Elie Wiesel is faced with multiple gory sites that test his faith. A major one was the hanging of the young boy, the pipel. Not only did that event affect Elie, but it affected the whole concentration camp. The Nazi’s intended for it to be a threat or warning to the prisoners; however, the prisoners felt as though the perpetrators crossed the line with the hanging. Although they did kill thousands of people on the daily basis, the hanging of the child was seen to be the cruelest of cruel acts just to prove a point.
Night by Elie Wiesel is a stirring and moving account of Elie’s experiences during the Holocaust. This narrative was given from Elie's perspective and offers a glimpse into the horrors he and other Jews tolerated during this terrible period. Elie communicates the value of faith and the need for courage in his experience. He also creates a huge image of the darkness that took over many held captive during the Holocaust. Elie's tale serves as a big reminder of the strength of perseverance and faith in the face of difficulty and struggle.