Relationships give people meaning and feelings of connection; when one is taken away from it with no other choice, the reason must be highly impacting. During the Holocaust, connections are brutally disrupted, which can be seen in Night by Elie Wiesel, who portrays the impacts of the concentration camps on father-son relationships. When placed in tense situations of survival, like the Holocaust, victims remove themselves from close relationships to survive. The world is fragile, so if something dramatic were to happen, people would be willing to push themselves from their attachments to survive. The Holocaust is an extreme example of the fragility of the world. Wiesel discusses how his and others' experiences in the concentration camps have changed because of the intensity and desire to live. It is simply human …show more content…
But in Wiesel’s position, there was “guilt and mourning with their imprisonment in the concentration camp” like many others around because watching family and friends become weak, give up, or die was very hard (Hirsch 18). However, because of how scary the situation is, it showed the fragility of society and the impact that extreme circumstances can have on people, even to the extent that they separate themselves from those they care about and love. In today’s world, society accommodates the weak and does everything possible to protect them. But what if today’s society is forced into primitive times? This thought can be seen frequently during the Holocaust. At first, they try to protect their friends and family, but as time passes, these harrowing times have no room for connections, which often means building emotional walls, even if it means distancing themselves from loved ones.