Loss Of Faith In Elie Wiesel's Night

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In the story night Elie Wiesel's loss of faith throughout the book showed how the holocaust was a time of loneliness among every Jewish prisoner. Jews were all held against their will and witnessed the killing of innocent people just because the Nazi party thought they weren’t “human”. Elie and many other Jews began to lose their faith in humanity and the thought of survival when they were deported and taken from their home lives. Elie was transported to Auschwitz and had the idea that God was uncaring for letting all of this happen to him. Jewish prisoners all witnessed the burning of innocent children first hand, they hadn’t done anything yet they were being thrown into fire pits in bunches. This act from the Nazis showed the sheer power they had over everyone. They were now starting to realize they had nothing they …show more content…

“The days were like nights, and the nights left dregs of their darkness in our souls.” (Wiesel, pg. 100). When he says this he is comparing the nights of darkness to everyone's souls at this time. Fire and the burnings of Jewish people just because they were Jewish was showing the Nazis cruel power they had over everyone in their pathway. The smoke of the cremations from the chimneys were the image of death and helplessness in the story. Everything that was being symbolized was comparing the Nazi party and what they were doing to the rest of the world, primarily the Jewish culture. “In front of us, those flames. It must have been around midnight.” (Wiesel, pg. 28). This was to show and give us an image of what the concentration camp had looked like when Elie had arrived. The hard gusts of freezing winds and the constant burning sensation of being bitter cold was a feeling common among every Jew in those concentration