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 Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night he compares two experiences of hanging through which the end result had been vastly different. The first hanging that he saw was of solely just a man and they were given soup afterwards; they were very hungry, their stomachs empty so once given that soup it had tasted as if he just won the lottery. Yes it was tragic but they had by then probably witnessed a lot of the hardships brought upon them by the Nazis’, so for them they only wanted soup. The second time was different, it was dark, inhumane, terribly horrifying. This time it was of three, two of which were adults; but that last one... that last one was a boy.
Through the unforgettable moments in Elie Wiesel’s book, Night it explains what the holocaust did, and how the Germans made it possible to question humanity. It displays Elie’s relationship with his father; Relationships helps the mind prevail through tough situations; They can be powerful and can influence one to keep hope for the future. Elie Wiesel describes his experiences in the numerous Auschwitz concentration camps. Elia and his father had their mind set to get to survive the camps as soon as they knew what was truly going on. Elie and his father’s relationship was instantly strengthened when Elie did not have to go with his mother, Elie describes “His voice was terribly sad.
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.
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
For this book report, I chose to read the book Night. Night was a book written by Elie Wiesel in 1960. The novel’s story is set in Germany during the holocaust which took place in April 1945. During the course of this story, the setting varies from the Transylvanian town of Sighet, to Auschwitz, then to Buna, and lastly Buchenwald.
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.
Everybody has experienced a life changing moment at some point or another, but nothing compares to the nightmare Elie Wiesel went through. In the novel Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie attempts to survive through hell on earth while living during the holocaust. Elie Wiesel lives in the town of Sighet, Transylvania, and he is a very religious Jewish teenage boy who studies Torah and Kabbalah, and has faith in God. Elie and his family, being very optimistic, don't believe that the Nazis will come to their town once they hear that there is Nazi invasion. But they do, in 1944, and things change drastically.
The quote from Elie Wiesel's "Night" paints a vivid picture of the physical toll that the Holocaust took on its victims. Wiesel describes the brutal conditions that he and his fellow prisoners endured, including forced marches through bitter cold and with little or no food, water, or rest. As he marches on, Wiesel realizes that his foot is no longer hurting, but rather frozen and detached from his body like a wheel fallen off a car. This powerful image conveys the sense of disconnection and dehumanization that many Holocaust survivors experienced, as they were treated like objects rather than human beings.
If someone was at a point in their life where they had endless suffering and all they needed to have faith is one piece of perseverance. To think that glimmer of hope would be. I think that the Jews would do anything for a glimmer of hope to take their minds off of the death that was happening all around them. For most people, the sign of hope would be the cannons going off because that showed that the battlefield was growing closer to the Jews that gave hope that the Germans were being pushed back and that shows the desperation that the Jews were in. People find the perseverance to have the strength and believe that the end was near so that the Jews could be liberated and rescued.
When it comes to war, there are no winners. When people think of war the first thing that come to their minds is victory never death. In the book Night Elie wrote about his past in Auschwitz seeing men, women and children being burned in the crematorium (Wiesel 32) War is a battle with consequences people think that war is a way to show power and strength and it does but the people who are fighting it lose their lives. Elie saw what appeared to be the dance of death.
Night by Elie Wiesel tells about the struggles Elie goes to go through as a Jewish person during the Holocaust. While being sent to many different concentration camps, Elie experiences countless terrible situations and sees that some of the prisoners become cruel when given leadership roles within the camps. Many people had lost all civility they had in an effort to stay alive, sacrificing others for their own good. Elie manages to hold onto his decency through all of this, though, by helping out others within the camp occasionally and supporting his father whenever he could.
Thou Shall Not Kill; a commandment, a law and four words to protect those who cannot defend themselves. These four words did little to protect the millions of Jews, during the Holocaust; who were hunted down, herded into camps, brutally beaten both physically and mentally and marked for death. Since then and before our world has seen this played out again and again in places like Nanking, Rwanda, Cambodia, and Darfur and on farms and in slaughterhouses in every country of the world. This bloodshed will not be cease until those four words are truly embraced by every culture to include every living species on this earth. Every trial and tragic event Eli Wiesel endured and wrote about in his novel, Night has happened to an animal in the woods,
Within the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, the author writes about his experience through the holocaust. The entire novel Elie’s goal was consistent, he wanted to stay untied with his father at all times. In the beginning of the novel Elie and his father were separated from his mother and sister. The author came to the realization that he would never meet his mother or sister again, so he decided that he would always be by his fathers side.