Compare And Contrast Tkam And Night

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TKAM and Night Synthesis Essay One of the most well-known Actresses and singers, Judy Garland once said ¨We cast away priceless time in dreams, born of imagination, fed upon illusion, and put to death by reality¨. In human nature, people's minds automatically go to the good side of reality especially when people have an average life. However, people can start to lose faith when getting exposed to the cruel realities of the world. Both Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and Elie Wiesel's Night depict similar instances of exposure which powerfully impact people's lives. Several characters within both novels experience these exact moments. The pure and innocent people are the most focused group we see these thoughts develop. Therefore, a common …show more content…

Within both novels Night and To Kill a Mockingbird we see people's lives get drastically changed by the brutal and cruel occurrences that erode faith. This occurs to the majority of the captives in the concentration camps in the novel Night. Day by day goes and the prisoners witness extremely gruesome and cruel events. The abrupt transition from ordinary life to one in which you are discriminated against and tortured leads to questions about society's faith. Elie Wiesel was one of the prisoners and he describes his time in the camps as if a black flame had consumed his soul. “I too had become a different person. The student of Talmud, the child I was, had been consumed by the …show more content…

In the novel Night, prisoners of the concentration camps are the most focused group when it comes to the negative effects of exposure to the ruthless realities of the world. Elie describes a scene where he witnesses the dead bodies of fellow prisoners within the concentration camp being unattended and left behind.“The dead remained in the yard, under the snow without even a marker, like fallen guards. No one recited the Kaddish over them. Sons abandoned the remains of their fathers without a tear” (92). The emotional desensitization that the prisoners had to undergo caused the sons, who would typically mourn and care for their father's remains, to be shown as abandoning them without showing a reaction. This portrays how the brutal realities of the world can affect people's lives in negative ways. With the traumatic events that the cruel world has to offer, Elie has firsthand experience with how they can negatively impact you. Elie lost his faith in God because of these experiences he witnesses and endures, showing the negative effects of exposure to a ruthless and cruel world.“But now, I no longer pleaded for anything. I was no longer able to lament. On the contrary, I felt very strong. I was the accuser, God the accused. My eyes had opened and I was alone, terribly alone in a world without God, without man. Without love or mercy” (68). In the novel To Kill a