The Night considers the main problem of Judaism and Christianity is precisely that of building a theology and an ethics of responsibility. In Elie Wiesel’s view, this is expressed through the responsibility generated by an existential memory “Do not ever struggle against memory. Even when it is painful; it will help you, it will reward you, it will make you richer. After all, what would culture be without memory? What would love for a friend be without the possibility of remembering it the next day? You cannot live without memory. You cannot exist without remembering things”(140); through his book which bring us back to WWII to see what happened in the concentration camp, and the people who is Jewish. Sympathy, distressing, great experience …show more content…
Eliezer never sinks to the level of beating his father, or outwardly mistreating himself, but his resentment toward to his father’s grows, even it is suggested; for instance, when Eliezer’s father prevents Eliezer from killing himself by falling asleep in the snow, try to keep him awake so that the SS officer cannot take him away and bury him. Whether or not this resentment comes to dominate Eliezer’s relationship with his father (indeed, a strong argument can be made for Eliezer’s altruism), it seems clearly that Eliezer himself feels great guilt to his father’s death. Proof that, we can also see in the concentration camp, there still has love, not just emotionless among people to people. As the woman who survived in the Holocaust tells us about her life when she enter to Auschwitz, there was a lady who treated her a lots, taught her and other girls how to survive and to remember their numbers; unfortunately, she died, no one knows her number when the SS officer asking, except her, the Jewish girl who was taught by the unlucky woman, read out loud the number and bought her body away to bury, so the SS officer cannot burn her or bring the body to the chimney.While it is true that Eliezer, after the Holocaust, thinks of himself as another person. This proves does not end with optimism and a rosy message, because it end as bleakly as many believe. What we are left with are questions about God’s and man’s capacity for evil, but no true answers, he also tell lies what happened from the concentration camp. After everything had happened, to the people who is survives from the concentration camps, never shall [they] forget that night. With Iby Knill, grew up in an educated, cultured family in Bratislava, then the capital of Czechoslovakia, and went through the terrified in Auswitch for six months, she said: “Unless we can teach people to understand each other, to tolerate and respect the differences,