Lost Humanity: Have you been stripped of your clothes, home, and family being treated less than human? Do you know how that feels? Sadly, in the autobiography ‘Night’ written by Elie Wiesel, he shares the horror he went through during the Holocaust. Where he was sent to a concentration camp with his father, in those camps people were killed and forced to work. Elie describes what he has been through and how he felt being treated less than a person. The horrors of the Holocaust dehumanized Elie and took away what little of himself he had left. In the concentration camps, people were forced into inhumane conditions and one of the inhumane conditions was being withheld food. As Elie writes,“I was nothing but a body. Perhaps even less:” In the time that Elie has …show more content…
With this quote, Elie tells us he has been in the camp for so long that his stomach is a reminder of how long he has been there. This also shows how Elie was treated: he was forced to eat next to nothing and had days where they ate nothing. This was another way the Nazis treated Elie less than humans; they controlled what and when Elie ate. These camps made him lose what little of his human emotion he had left. Even after knowing his father was dead, he didn’t react, he couldn’t. As Elie describes, “I did not weep, and it pained me that I could not weep. But I was out of tears.”(Wiesel, 133). This shows that all the trauma he went through caused him to be emotionally numb, his experience during the Holocaust took his emotions as he was a shell of himself. Someone who suffered with him, someone he loved died and he didn’t cry. All of the horror he was through dehumanized and changed him. In conclusion, the autobiography ‘Night’ written by Elie Wiesel captured the dehumanizing effects that the Holocaust had on people. As we see the horror Elie went through, from not being able to control what or when he eats, to being emotionally numb that he ran out of