The concentration camp Auschwitz was a brutal and horrific place for young children to get sent to. The novel “Night,” by Elie Wiesel, was about millions of Jews being taken to concentration camps and being executed only because of their religion. Many Jews were very in-tune with their religion and God, but they were still forced to endure dreadful things, ultimately leading to the loss of hope in their God and their beliefs. In “Night” by Elie Wiesel, childhood and adolescence are highlighted as times of agony and pain by emphasizing the horrific truths behind the Holocaust in order to portray the loss of faith in their religion and morals in the victims of Antisemitism. Ultimately, the effects of antisemitism can take a toll on someone’s character and beliefs. …show more content…
[Because] He had created Auschwitz, Birkenau, Buna, and so many other factories of death?” Eliezer and other characters lose faith in God because they do not believe in praying and worshipping someone who created all this torture in the first place. Eliezer prays when he is first delivered to the first concentration camp, but as the story goes on and he sees all the people he cares about be killed in vain, how can he forgive the person who created it all? On the Day of Atonement, a fasting day for Jews, “[he] did not fast [because] there was no longer any reason for [him] to fast. He no longer accepts God’s silence. [As he ate his food, he] turned that act into a symbol of rebellion, of protest against