Night is a book reflected through the author’s emotions—visually, mentally, and physically. These emotions are condensed within the theme of Night, which was his loss of religious faith. The theme itself was reflected off the author’s experiences, hence the necessity of author’s craft. Elie Wiesel’s experiences of losing his father (physically and mentally) and watching innocent adults and children die (visually and physically) develops how the author is telling the story. In his loss of religious faith, he questioned God: “Why should I bless His name?
Jacob Jalloway Ms. Klein E116 12 November 2014 God is Always There God is a very significant, and important being. He pulls many people through times of hardship, as well as times of joy. To many of the Jews in the concentration camps during the Holocaust, God was the only thing that they had to live for. In the Book Night, by Elie Wiesel, the main character Weisel changed his view on God as the book progressed. In the start of the book Weisel was a boy who came from a very religious background, and was very active, and interested in his faith.
Throughout history, humankind has been greatly affected by religion. It has brought people together, caused wars, and helped many people find themselves. Night, by Elie Wiesel, is a personal memoir about the author’s experience as a young Jewish boy during the Holocaust. At the mere age of fifteen he was taken from his home, placed in concentration camps, sent on death marches, and potentially had his whole life stripped from him. Throughout the memoir, Elie Wiesel uses Eliezer’s change in faith to show the importance and difficulty of maintaining faith through hardship by prioritizing Eliezer’s communication with his god over his interaction with those around him.
There are themes that are seen throughout Night: man versus God, family, hunger and thirst. Elie Wiesel had God from the very beginning all the way to the end by questioning God and His existence for letting such horrific actions performed by the Nazis. His transformation of a resolute believe in God to being angry with God for making a child suffer a hanging to in the end when Elie is pleading with God to be able to stay with his father until the end. In a selection from Night, Elie is ranting to God, “what are You, my God? I thought angrily… why do you go on troubling these poor people’s wounded minds, their ailing bodies” (Wiesel 66).
Elie struggled with his relationship with God frequently throughout the book. In the beginning he practiced Kabbalah but in chapter 5 he doesn’t even want to acknowledge God’s presence. He had a complex relationship with God and he wavered in his beliefs. His relationship with God is important because we see how hardships can change someone's beliefs and how easy it was for him to put the blame on God. During chapter 5 it was the end of the Jewish year and the prisoners got together and prayed.
Going through hard experiences in life can transform a person’s relationship with God. In Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, he writes about how his faith in God is altered as a result of his experience in the Holocaust. Before the war, Elie’s relationship with God is straightforward: He has absolute, complete faith in God. Over the course of the memoir, he develops a more mature relationship with God, in which Wiesel continues to believe in God but expresses his anger and doubt.
Carter Denbrock Mr. Haadsma English 10B 27 February 2023 TITLE In Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, a primary theme of the book is that you must remain strong, while looking out for you and your families, even in the face of conflict and tragedy. Weisel recalls many points in time where he remained hopeful even when it seemed impossible. He and millions of other Jewish prisoners were at the hands of the merciless Nazi’s, Weisel recalls many events where he could have given up but would not allow himself to.
During the Holocuast, the Nazis commited terrible acts against humanity, and genocide against the Jews, burning children, separting families, and even killing jews in fring squads. These horrors were so terrible they led to the Jews, who were seen as a group very connected to god, to start questioning their beliefs. In Eli Weisel’s Night, his journey in faith is strongly depicted. We see how as the war goes on, Weisel grows a deeper understanding of god, and what it means to believe.
He provides examples from society as a whole, those examples he witnesses by and upon the Jews in his circle are his acquaintances and those examples affect his own family. This theme is still relevant today as genocide occurs in Ukraine. Ellie discusses the inhumane treatment inflicted on the Jews by the Nazis. At first, the Nazis moved their officers into the Jews’ homes. Before long, the Nazis arrested the Jewish leaders ( Wiesel 10).
The road to a relationship with God is not straight, it is ever changing with challenges and curves and ups and downs. This is a main theme in the memoir Night, by Elie Wiesel, where Elie has a struggling relationship with God. He thinks that God has abandoned him and his dad so he does not feel the need to continue his relationship with God. Elie was excited about his faith but the holocaust makes him feel angry and confused with God. Elie 's faith excites him from a young age and he wants to learn more about God.
Wiesel isn’t thankful for God being silent and feels nothing but anger towards him. To sum up, loss of faith is another theme in Night that shows