Discriminating those who look or believe differently is extremely wrong. The books “Night” by Elie Wiesel, and “Farewell to Manzanar” by Jeanne Wakatsuki go into detail about what is was like to living in camps. Jeanne Wakatsuki and Elie Wiesel both suffered in these camps, but Elie Wiesel lost more of his faith left in humanity. Elie Wiesel’s experiences took a major toll on his views of humanity. “As for me, I was thinking not about death, but not wanting to be separated from my father (Wiesel, 82).” He had already been ripped away from his mother and sisters, which only drove him to protect his father to the best of his abilities. Seeing his father losing hope over time was devastating for Elie to watch. The concentration camps tore up his family completely. His misery only grew after that. “A silent death, suffocation. No way to scream or cry for help (Weisel, 94).” Both Elie and his father were treated inhumanely and worked until their bodies ran …show more content…
“At seven, I was too young to be insulted. The camp worked on me in a much different way (Wakatsuki, 35).”, she states. All through her childhood, she watched as the camp tore her father down to the point of abusing her mother. She experienced her father’s wrath slowly grow inside of him, and had to deal with him occasionally taking it out on her. Eventually she began to feel like she could not do what she wanted, forced into activities she had no interest in. “We were luckier than many (Wakatsuki, 153).”, Jeanne says. Unlike Wiesel, Jeanne was able to finish off her high school career outside of the camp.Yet she was still penalized because of how she looked. She had taught herself to stay quiet, to not speak out about her troubles. This made it difficult for her to make friends, because the parents did not want her in their homes. Jeanne’s time in the camp brought out the darkest side of her family, yet she still was able to push through the