What Is Elie Wiesel's Response To Night

496 Words2 Pages

Never Ending Darkness
The Holocaust was is one of the most gruesome events to take place in history. In the novel, Night by Elie Wiesel readers obtain a first hand experience of all the unexplainable horrors of the Holocaust. Night begins at the end of WWII and gives a frightening account of the Nazi death camps. This memoir is a powerful read showing the internal struggles a young teenage boy goes through. I thought this was a very notable novel because Night is written by a concentration camp survivor so it is far more credible. Therefore, it gives his personal accounts and shows how he changes as a person through his suffering. It is not about the background or only the camp, but what he experiences himself, which I presume more interesting. I believe this novel is worth reading because it has a powerful message and moving tone.
Through detail and thoughtful passages, Wiesel sets the tone from the beginning, “Never …show more content…

Parts of Night will leave you disturbed and uncomfortable; however, that is the point. What Jews encountered was horrific. Wiesel wants readers to know what happened in those camps. I think that this is one of the reasons this book is fascinating. Many prisoner felt the same, “We were not afraid. And yet, if a bomb had fallen on the blocks, it alone would have claimed hundreds of victims on the spot. But we were no longer afraid of death; at any rate, not of that death“ (Wiesel 57). Giving and up and death did not seem awful to them. All the work and treatment they experienced was inhuman. I think a large amount of them were led to give up, including Elie Wiesel.Even when the camp was liberated, the pain was not over, “From the depths of the mirror, a corpse gazed back at me“ (Wiesel 109). This quote makes you realize that the pain was still not over for the survivors. Night will leave you feeling helpless and wishing there would have been a way to help