Eliezer’s Epic Evolution In the case for many people, when facing hardships and difficulties in life, their lives are greatly affected. Similarly, Elie Wiesel, author of Night, and the Jews’ lives were altered excessively when facing the atrocity throughout the concentration camps. Witnessing death, working tirelessly, and dealing with the inhumanity shaped Eliezer entirely. The story, taking place during the Holocaust, was during one of the most immense genocides lead by Adolf Hitler (leader of the Nazi Party). Eliezer endured labor and starvation, changing him as a person. Hours of working in the concentration camps brought out the greatest transformation Eliezer had gone through; a transformation leaving him completely disparate from his former self. Eliezer became appalled, lost his loved ones, and felt detached from God. …show more content…
Eliezer realizes the cruelty happening when the Jews of Sighet were taken into the concentration camps. He stops and truly understands what is happening: “Yes, I did see this, with my own eyes … children thrown into the flames … I pinched myself: Was I still alive? Was I awake? How was it possible that men, women, and children were being burned and that world kept silent? No. All this could not be real” (Wiesel 32). At this point, Eliezer finds it impossible to believe the brutal acts of the concentration camps. Seeing children being murdered was devastating to him. The killing of the Jews commenced a dark, evil side to Eliezer’s life, one he had not experienced