Elaborate: He had hesitated to if he should just give up or tough it out, but he chose to live for his father.
Reasoning: Elie did not have much hope to live, but his father pulled him through in deciding if he should give in and die in the
In consideration of the fact that Eli has been mentally dismissed by his father and them not having a very tight father, son bond he has been through many beatings in his mind. Never has Elie been through physical annihilation within his childhood for small reasons. The text states, “I tried to protect myself from the blows,”(41). He believes in trying to protect himself from the thing that he fears the most. As a result of this his grandeur slowly seems to dissipate as time seems to change, but very soon after his beating Elie hears the words, “ ‘Don’t lose hope,’”(41). Those words help bring what small nobility Elie had inside him even though his status still remained the same, he was still not a “human” in the eyes of his…
Elie’s father is consumed by Death and losses all hope of surviving. He is waiting to die. He quickly becomes ill and eventually passes. After his father’s death, Elie only cares about food. He is liberated April 11, 1945.…
Elie Wiesel crafted the beginning of his speech by entering with a sympathetic tone as his mentions his experience of the day the Americans had recused him to obtain the audience’s trust. However, he switches to a critical tone asks multiple rhetorical questions with answers in order to arise the audience curiosity of what the answer might be and mention America’s downside of their history in order to gain more credibility and to lean towards the topic of indifference.…
Elie clings to his father, and his father to him. Elie did not believe his surroundings, he could not bare to consider that idea that the Nazi’s were really slaughtering the Jews, until he saw live babies being thrown into fiery graves. That is when Elie realized that not everything is good, and that there are bad things in the world. During this time Elie’s father cried- this was the first time Elie had ever seen his father cry. Elie’s father begins to soften and break under the pressures of camps. Elie and his father are forced to work and get little to eat, and grow weaker and weaker by the days, however they still keep going. Elie saw and experienced many things each time he lost more and more faith until one day he saw a young boy on hung, and he said that God died with that young boy on the gallows that day. Elie was becoming colder as he experienced the harsh reality of concentration camps, and Elie’s father was becoming weaker and more dependent on Elie as he experience…
In the book Night by Wiesel, he tells his experience in his time as a Jew in the holocaust. We also get a look at his thoughts on how he values his own survival. In the preface of Night, Elie says, “I don’t know how I survived; I was weak, rather shy; I did nothing to save myself. A miracle? Certainly not.” This passage shows Elie is not certain of his own survival and says he did not deserve his own life to be spared.…
In the book Night Elie survived the Holocaust because his father helped him persevere. His Father help them because Elie had lost everything and his father was all he had left. He was a reason for him to keep on going and not to give up, a reason to live. There is a point in his life where he was running with his father and the other prisoners to another camp in the cold. He thought of giving up and dying. in the book it says, “The idea of dying, of ceasing to be, began to fascinate me. To no longer exist … my father's presence was the only thing that stopped me” (86). This shows that he had a chance of ending his life by giving up, to end his pain and misery, but he didn't because of his father. He continued to fight to keep on surviving.…
Throughout the book the relationship between Elie and his dad strengthened as they work together. In a situation where both Elie and his dad were at a cemetery they went to a shed to lie down and get some rest, they both came…
His father was a busy community leader and he did not have much time for his family. In the beginning of the memoir, Elie noted his father was more concerned with others than with his family. As the atrocities of the camps escalated, it was a major goal of Elie’s to stay with his father. In the camps, their relationship changed drastically to one of protection. Elie’s outlook on family was very different inside the camps. His father went from barely caring for him to being a protective father and depending on each other for survival. After seeing the rest of his family disappear, he knew his father was his last relative so he clung to him. However, as life in the camps continued, there were times Elie resented having to take care of his father and began to blame him for their troubles. An example of this was while his father was being beaten. Elie thought “... if I felt anger at that moment, it was not directed at the Kapo but at my father. Why couldn’t he have avoided Idek’s wrath? That was what life in a concentration camp had made of me …” (54). The camps were filling Elie with anger and blame; he was upset because his father was getting hurt and his innocence was stripped from him. This is what the camps were trying to accomplish - break people down so they could not rebel successfully and in this case they succeeded. Another example of a time when Elie disliked having to take care of his father was…
Elie had to make a lot of changes to his lifestyle. When they first got to the camp him and his father got separated from his mother and sister. Elie says “Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which turned my life into one long night.” (43) Elie went with his dad because he was more like his dad than he was his mom. There was one major change and it was with his dad. In the beginning he would do almost anything to keep his dad with him and make sure his dad was okay. When his dad started to get beat, he would not move or say anything even when his dad cried out to him for help because he was scared for his own life. Elie cared for his dad to a great extent but when it came to his own life he would not help his…
I am absolutely sure it was hard foe Elie to lose his father the way he…
Chance and choice play a huge role in Elie’s journey throughout the holocaust. He makes choices that saved his life. He made the choice to use a fake age, which allowed…
Elie had injured his foot and stayed in a hospital for a couple of weeks to have an operation for his foot. During his stay the war was getting closer and the kappos were planning evacuation. The two options were either to stay and die, or survive, or to evacuate with everybody in camp. “As for me, i was thinking not about death but about not wanting to be separated from my father. We had already suffered so much, endured so much together. This was not the moment to separate.” (Wiesel 82). Even though his foot was still healing, Wiesel went to walk many miles so that he could be with his father. Knowing the risks, he didn’t care what would happen to him, as long as he was with his father. This helps the reader understand how violence impacted the father and son bond. No matter what, they would do anything just to stay together, even if it means they have to take some risks. As the evacuation proceeded, the men were ordered to run several miles. If they did not maintain a steady pace then they would meet death. As Elie continued running, defeat overcame him and he just wanted to give up and rest, knowing he would be killed. “My father’s presence was the only thing that stopped me. He was running next to me out of breath, out of strength. I had no right to let myself die. What would he do without me? I was his sole support.” (Weisel 87). This also convey an…
On many occasions in Night, the Jews' individual human survival instincts dominate their compassion for others and love for family members. After many months of exhausting work and living in terrible conditions, Elie's father's health decreases rapidly, and Elie spends the night in Buchenwald on the bunk above him. When he wakes up, his father had been taken away and replaced by another sick prisoner. Elie's reaction is surprisingly insensitive. "I did not weep, and it pained me that I could not weep. But I was out of tears. And deep inside me, if I could have searched the recesses of my feeble conscience, I might have found something like: Free at last!" (112). Within him, Elie's desire to survive and endure this test of strength supersedes his devotion to his father. Human survival instinct takes over and he gives in to his concerns for himself. With this changed perspective focused on self-preservation, he no longer wants to provide adequate care for his father, and it matters much less to Elie if his father survives. He is seen as a burden instead of an important figure in Elie's life, and so Elie is relieved when he finds his father has been taken away for a certain death. The challenges of life in Buchenwald force the Jews to transform their way of thinking and behaving to give themselves the best chance of…
The French girl that Elie meet while he was working said this to Elie to gave him hope and told him not to give up. She told him that what was happening to them would come to an end one day and they would be set free. She told him to keep his anger for another day, when they would be set…
Urgently Elie’s father tells him to wake up and, ‘ "Don't let yourself be overcome by sleep, Eliezer. It's dangerous to fall asleep in snow. One falls asleep forever. Come, my son, come…Get up." Get up? How could I? How was I to leave this warm blanket? I was hearing my father's words, but their meaning escaped me, as if he had asked me to carry the entire shed on my arms … "Come, my son, come… " I got up, with clenched teeth. Holding on to me with one arm, he led me outside. It was not easy. It was as difficult to go out as to come in. Beneath our feet there lay men, crushed, trampled underfoot, dying. Nobody paid attention to them.’ (Weisel 84). Now it’s not the son this time, but the father that needs Elie to survive. There were corpses all around father and son like moths around a bright light, yet no one put their mind on them. But, Elie’s father decides to warn Elie about the consequences of sleeping in snow by stating that ‘One falls asleep forever’ (Wiesel 84). This quote confirms the previous statement in the unbreakable father and son relationship by displaying the efforts of Elie’s father unshackling Elie from the chains of…