"Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed," Elie Wiesel wrote of his experience in a Jewish concentration camp. There are many misconceptions about what happens inside concentration camps therefore, much has been written on the subject. Night by Eliezer Wiesel, In My Hands by Jennifer Armstrong, and "German Concentration Camps" by the CIA are three texts written about concentration camps during WWII. Each discusses what happened to prisoners during the war as well as ways prisoners survived these dehumanizing institutions. Prisoners who lived in concentration camps during the Holocaust used perseverance and faith to survive the violence …show more content…
One instance that is the same for both Night and In My Hands was that both Elie and Irene witnessed guards tossing babies into the air, and shooting them. Another theme in both books is perseverance. Elie had to struggle to survive in the camps he was put in. He had to make it through beatings, and starvation. He knew that he had to keep going, and do everything he could to survive because he was his father's will to live. Irene had to suffer through torture from being captured by the German soldiers, being raped, and then get away from another attempt of rape from her doctor. She was placed into a concentration camp, and had to be able to make it out alive. Even though her life seemed to be over, she ended up meeting a man, who later became her husband. If she had not tried to help the innocent, she never would have found the love of her …show more content…
Elie was Jewish, while Irene was a Catholic. In the beginning of each book, they both were very dedicated to their religion, but Elie started to steer away from his faith, while Irene kept believing. Little by little, Elie lost his believe in God. He did not know what good God would let such an awful thing happen to his people. By the end of the book, he had completely lost faith in God. Irene held on to her faith until the very end. She came across a Jewish woman who was pregnant, and she wanted to get rid of it because she was in hiding from the Germans. Since Irene was a Catholic, her religion did not believe in abortions. Irene convinced her to carry the baby to term, so the child would