Later on in the story he noticed that God wasn’t helping them and started to lose what he used to believe in. An example of syntax is when Elie says “I had never asked myself that question. I cried because . . . because something inside me felt the need to cry. That was all I knew.”
Eleven million people were murdered in the Holocaust, six million of which were Jews who were killed solely for their beliefs. This terrible genocide is recounted through the eyes of Elie Wiesel in his memoir, Night. As the novel progresses, Wiesel's faith in his God falters, due to the physical and emotional suffering he endured as a Jew in the Holocaust. During the first couple of chapters of Night, Wiesel’s faith and dedication to his religion are very strong.
Can you imagine being stripped of all your faith? In the memoir, Night, by Elie Wiesel, Elie and all the Jews faced many spiritual crises that tested their faith in God, humanity and himself. Elie had lost all faith because of the way they were treated by the Nazis. The Nazis punished the Jews for practicing their religion. Any sort of faith the Jews had were lost after the way the Nazis treated them and the terrifying events they faced.
The book Night by Elie Wiesel shows how suffering and witnessing the painful deaths of many innocent lives can be the cause of loss of faith in the benevolent god. This book is taken in a horrible, inhumane place called the Holocaust. It all started when Moshe the Beadle stopped talking about God after he had witnesses the massacre of Jews by the German Gestapo; at that time no one believed him but time would prove them wrong. When Elie witnesses the horror of the concentration camps and what they do to people especially children he feels as if his God has been murdered right before his eyes. In the camp he sees an atrocity after atrocity, death after death.
Eliezer Wiesel, the author of Night, wrote the book with the goal of teaching his audience to never lose faith. As a Holocaust survivor, Eliezer faced obstacles that most of us will never have to face. These hardships however, did cause him to finally lose his faith in God. Throughout the book, Eliezer questions his faith. Because of the severe trial and adversity, Eli Weisel questions his faith in God, even though he was a faithful man before the Holocaust.
Religion. A strong word for some and an everyday term for others. To Eliezer Wiesel religion meant everything, at least that’s how it was prior to the holocaust. While Wiesel was at the appalling concentration camp his faith for God began to dwindle with every reprehensible event Eliezer was included in. While dwelling upon the relationship that Wiesel had with God throughout the novel Night I have come to the conclusion that Wiesel's experience at Auschwitz has stripped him of his faith for the lord.
The Holocaust affects Jews in a way that seems unimaginable, and most of these effects seem to have been universal experiences; however, in the matter of faith, Jews in the concentration camp described in Elie Wiesel’s Night are affected differently and at different rates. The main character, Elie, loses his faith quickly after the sights he witnesses (as well as many others); other Jews hold on much longer and still pray in the face of total destruction. In the beginning, all of the Jews are more or less equally faithful in their God and religion.
Belief and Faith is a “double-edged sword” to the jews, it cuts both ways. It keeps them alive, and at the same time makes them oblivious, and leads to their suffering. Over time, Elie’s belief in god, diminishes and eventually he questions God’s existence extensively and at point, Elie is infuriated that even though they are being tormented and enslaved, the Jews will still pray to god, and thank him, “If god did exist, why would he let u go through all the pain and suffering (33). This is a major point in the ongoing theme of faith and belief, because for once he is infuriated with the thought of religion in a time of suffering. Throughout the book, with the nazis ultimate goal is to break the jews and make dehumanize them and if anything, their goal is take and diminish their belief.
According to mahatma gandhi the word “Faith is not something to grasp, it is a state to grow into” (“Mahatma”). This can be seen in Elie Wiesel's memoir night through himself. As the memoir opens we learn that he was 15 during ww2 and that him and his father were put into a concentration camp. Elie Wiesel's, night, i belive experiences his loss of faith through this holocaust.
In Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, the theme of faith impacts Elie's experiences throughout the Holocaust. One time when faith impacts Elie’s experiences is when he believes that God is the reason he gets to keep his shoes. Elie writes, “I thanked God, in an improvised manner…” (Wiesel 38).This quote shows Elie's initial belief in God and his faith during the early times of the Holocaust when he expresses gratitude for his shoes not being taken.
He feels almost anger that the others still put faith in God. He feels that God is lesser than man, that Man is stronger because they still worship God after all they have been through. He felt that he “was the accuser, God the accused.” This is the final stretch, and Elie no longer believes in God or religion.
Topic Sentence Elie, a once devoted believer, begins to question his faith upon witnessing the brutal execution of the Pipel. Prior to the Pipels execution, Elie was a boy who devoted his life to God. Though the concentration camps made his beliefs falter, he never abandoned his faith. The Pipel, being accused of plotting against the Nazi forces, was executed along with the Kapo. Before witnessing the boys murder, Elie’s faith never faltered.
When these people were being treated in such malicious ways, they started to believe that God wasn’t really there for them. They felt as if He wasn 't there to protect them. Sometimes, they started to rebel against their own religion and turn to their worst enemies for faith. Throughout Elie’s memoir, Night, Elie shows that many people, including himself, lost faith during their stay at the concentration camps. Many other victims of the concentration camps lived to see such tragedies that they began to lose hope in God, as well as he did.
According to Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary, faith is “belief and trust in God”(“Faith.”). This faith permeated young Elie Wiesel’s life before he and his family were sent to concentration camps during the Holocaust, and is an idea that is omnipresent throughout his novel, Night. As the novel opens, we see how absolutely devoted young Wiesel is to studying the Jewish religion. His belief in an omnipotent, benevolent God is unconditional, and he cannot imagine life without this divine power. He is eager, optimistic, and he even deviates from his father's recommendation by remaining in the synagogue after the others leave and he finds Moshe the Beadle to guide him in his studies.
Throughout Elies life he has always been drawn to his religion and faith, he has always put God before anyone or anything. However, as some of the men in the camp discusses matters of God and his mysterious ways, they begin to throw around the idea of why he would do this to the Jews and why he remained silent in a time like this. Elie then thought to himself, “I was not denying His existence, but I doubted His absolute justice” ( Wiesel emphasis added).Although, he would doubt Gods justice he still believes and knows he is there, he is just questioning why his God would punish the Jews with such horrendous suffering. On the other hand, Elie also experiences a moment to which he finds himself befriending two young brothers who had come from a religious background. The boys begin bringing back memories for Elie of religion and family, Elie states, “ … they knew huge numbers of Hebrew songs.