Luke spoerel
Ms. Gribbin
7 / February / 2023
English 8
Nothing Left
No food, no water, and barely any life, were the conditions that Elie Wiesel a 15 year old holocaust survivor had to endure for 11 months. Imagine you are crammed into small cattle carts and transported to a camp, where you are forced to do hard labor, given no food, and the chance of survival is close to none. All because of your religion. In the book, Night, by Elie Wiesel dehumanization is shown when you are selected either to live or to die based on how you looked, Having to fight and kill others just for a piece of bread and being forced to run until they physically could not.
One way the Jews were dehumanized was when their fate was determined by how they looked. When you first stepped into Auschwitz you were either sent to the left or the right. If you were sent to the left you were sent to the gas Chambers and if you were sent to the right you would have to live in terrible conditions until you died. “He was holding a conductor's baton and was surrounded by officers. The baton was moving constantly, sometimes to the right, sometimes to the left” (Wiesel 31). This shows that the ss Ofsers did not think twice about the Jews. In the Quote when it says “The baton was moving constantly” (Wiesel 31). It means that they did not care enough to look at the people as
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the SS officers would give themselves entertainment by making them fight for a single piece of bread. “"No. I wasn't asleep. They threw themselves on me. They snatched it from me, my b r e a d ... And they beat m e ... A g a i n … I can't go on” (Wiesel 110). This shows that some of the prisoners had no mercy for even a dying man. It proves that they were given nothing and that they would have to fight if they wanted to live. The second thing that this quote shows is that these people were desperate. so desperate that it made good people