ipl-logo

Elie Wiesel Reflection For Night

896 Words4 Pages

Introduction At first glance, Elie Wiesel looks like an average elder gentleman. Once I opened the first page of Elie Wiesel’s book Night, my perspective on Elie changed. The tone of the story within the first few pages reveals that Elie is no average man. Wiesel’s emotions are strong on the pages of his book, but even more powerful when he speaks. The pain that Elie felt while he was in Auschwitz is apparent in his voice as he walks through the camp with Oprah. However, Elie’s emotion changes as he talks about his life after being liberated. His optimistic mind-set is very inspirational and comforting. Education In 1941, Adolf Hitler and the SS troops began one of the most aggressive acts of oppression of human history. Approximately six …show more content…

I thought the book was sad and I really enjoyed how personal it was. After reading it again as an adult, I had a whole new feeling towards the book. Although I still think the book is sad and I do still enjoy how personal it is, I have a new appreciation for the text. This time, I felt every emotion that Elie felt. This time, I felt like I was going on the journey alongside him. One of the first moments that really stood out to me was when Elie and his family were still in the ghetto. “I had no strength left. The journey had just begun and I already felt so weak…” (Wiesel, 1958, p. 19). It was surreal hearing that Elie felt weak so early on knowing what he was about to encounter. Towards the end of the book, Elie exerted so much strength throughout his entire time at the concentration camps and I remembered what he said in the beginning, that he had no strength. Elie writes about when he first arrived at the camp “But we were pulling into a station. Someone near a window read to us: Auschwitz. Nobody had ever heard that name.” (Wiesel, 1958, p. 27). Hearing that nobody had ever heard of the name Auschwitz was powerful. In the train car, there could have been professors, doctors, individuals who went through many years of education and even they hadn’t heard of the word Auschwitz. A few times in the book, Elie recalls an SS soldier calling him, but instead

Open Document