Alan Hua Mr. Armenta CP English 2B Period 5 10 May, 2024 The Power of Indifference Today To a certain extent, indifference is reenacted everywhere around the world. There is always a lifetime of someone who turns a blind eye to someone else who desperately needs support. As prevalent in Wiesel's “Night”, we see the issue of indifference throughout the events in the story. Guards compared people to dogs in the notion they would be put down as one, bystanders or civilians throwing bread to humans like pigeons, fellow prisoners who face the same situation slaughter one another to ensure their chance at freedom. “Night” by Elie Wiesel was based on his experiences of the Holocaust, many would assume that while it did take place in the past, indifference should not continue to exist as in modern times. …show more content…
There's a term for that: "these issues of indifference are just as powerful as they were in the past." One of the primary concerns in "Night" as mentioned previously is indifference, and other examples include the sons who abandon or kill their fathers for food and one less mouth to feed. Their reasoning behind this would be their selfishness and preservation of themselves, rather than seeing their father as a priority, they see them as dead weight that should be tossed away. In the memoir “Night” it states that “My God, Lord of the Universe, give me [the] strength never to do what Rabbi Eliahou's son has done,” (Wiesel Pg. 97). The 'Standard' of the 'Standard' of the 'Standard' of the 'Standard' of the 'Standard' of the 'Standard' of the 'Standard' of the Elie realized that during the run he saw Eliahou's son escape his father and leave him behind. Rather than telling Rabbi Eliahou, he kept it a secret because how would the father feel after hearing the news of his son running away? Elie would never abandon his father, but the son of the Rabbi thought otherwise in that