In a life full of atrocities and cruel treatment is it possible for decent people to turn into heartless brutes? In the novel “Night” answer to this question is exposed to the young eyes of Eliezer Wiesel. In this novel Elie describes his experience in the Jewish concentration camps of Auschwitz. In these camps, the prisoners were faced with extreme brutality facing inhumane torture. “The Kapos were beating us again, but I no longer felt the pain.. We were naked, holding our shoes and belts.” (Wiesel 36) Elie Wiesel is faced with several obstacles, being beaten, striped of his life, and losing his father. Through all of this traumatic disasters, can Elie manage to keep his humanity? In the first days of Elie’s imprisonment in Auschwitz, he along with other inmates faced physical and mental abuse. “I no longer felt anything except the lashes of the wip.” (Wiesel 57) This quote explains Elie’s thoughts as he is being whipped by an SS officer. As Eliezer struggles to stay alive he prays to God, but soon loses all of his faith in him. Through his struggles in Auschwitz, Elie begins to realize he has allowed himself to be selfish with his father. He begins to wish he no wanted to care for the old man. …show more content…
No more was he Eliezer Wiesel, but just another number. “I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name.” (Wiesel 42) The longer the young boy was imprisoned, the more his faith began to deteriorate. As Elie’s faith withered away, he started to become more inhumane than ever before. At times, as described in the novel, Elie contemplated taking his dying father's rations of food for himself. “I thought deep down, not daring to admit it to myself. Too late to save your old father… You could have two rations of bread, two rations of soup.” (Wiesel