I believe in the book, “ Night” the Jews were very differently treated because, the Jews were not placed in a factory and protected. Elie was placed in a concentration camp where Jews were separated from their families and the weak were sent to…
In the Novel Night, the reader is introduced to the character Elie Wiesel who is conflicted between choosing whether he should be at his fathers side or not. in Auschwitz, the death camp Elie is taken to, he remarks all the children abandoning their fathers because they saw them as weak and wanted to fight for themselves. Elie struggled between choosing his father, or life and was uncertain of what decision he should make. Eventually Elie learns that staying with his father is the right thing to do because he was not going to leave him to die alone in such a cruel place. He realized how brutal the situation was and knew his father was the only thing he had left.…
One example of dehumanization in the book is on page forty-two when Elie no longer had a name, “ I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name.”…
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…
This sentence gives the readers a quick picture how humans were treated as things and not treated as a human should be treated by comparing babies as targets. “You must get completely undressed... Run as if the devil were after you! Don’t look at the SS. Run, straight in front of you!” is another example of dehumanization. In this part of the book Jews were ordered to strip and run in order to pass a test for survival. This is an example of how Elie, his father and his fellow Jews were humiliated. A final example of how Elie and other Jews were dehumanized was when they were asked to leave their homes and were moved into the ghetto “Faster! I had no strength left. The journey had only just begun, and I felt so weak...” They had little time to pack their most precious belongings and move out before something worse happened; they were taken out of their own homes into the…
The process of Dehumanization shows three different stages; Co Dependence, Rejection and Survival of the fittest. In the book Night, these three stages are shown through Elie Wiesel and other poor souls in a number of Concentration camps.…
Elie’s father was with Elie a lot of the time of their stay at Auschwitz. Elie and his father were sent to the Labor Yard and were forced to work. The Jewish people that were sent to the Labor Yards were kept to alive just to work. If they stopped they were beaten, “Suddenly woken up from a heavy doze, he dealt my father such a clout he fell to the ground, crawling back to his place on all fours” (48). The Nazis beat the Jews for having human needs. The Nazis also starved the Jewish people and on occasion were given a small piece of bread to nibble on. The Jews were taught by the Nazis to work until they keeled over and died. The Jewish people were starved and torn apart mentally. They eventually begin to fight each other for what little food they got. Elie saw another father and son arguing and the father screaming, “Don’t you recognize me? I’m your father… You’re hurting me… You’re killing your father! I’ve got some bread… for you too… for you too” (96). Elie betrayed his own blood for the pure fact that he was hungry. Beats and attacks his father for the small piece of bread that his father was going to share with his son. The Jewish people were so dehumanized that they would betray their own…
“Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the Vitim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented” (Elie Wiesel). Dehumanization is the act of not being treated fair or human. In the novel, Night, by Elie Wiesel, he demonstrates his own personal experiences with dehumanization such as Being beaten for animalistic reasons, being killed off by dysentery, and being worked to fatality.…
Elie was a very religious boy who dedicated his life to benediction. During the holocaust, the Jews were blind to what was really going on inside these “camps” like Buchenwald and Auschwitz, so when they were evicted from their homes they didn’t resist. All of the things that happened in the concentration camp, to Elie, or around him played a part in ripping him from his religious ties. “The Almighty, the eternal and terrible Master of…
Elie and his father were always together. they loved each other and all that they had was each other. They always wanted to be near…
By ruthlessly stealing from Eliezer his tangible possessions, his family, his community, and his name, the Nazis cause Eliezer to lose his connection to his security and identity connected to family, place, and tradition. As Eliezer…
In the novel, "In the Heat of the Night", a murder is investigated by a negro detective, Virgil Tibs, and a team of white officers. "In the Heat of the Night" is a detective novel written by John Ball to show racial attitudes that happened in a small town in the southern part of the United States. Discrimination not only affects the main character Virgil Tibs, but also affects everyone involved in the story. Lastly, discrimination, is a negative and degrading action that clouds a person's judgement and affects everyone negatively. The following essay is about how discrimination affects a negro detective and southern whites negatively when they investigate a murder.…
Elie is filled with guilt as he thinks to pursue unthinkable things while his father’s strength depletes reversing the roles, where the father starts to depend on child. Elie feels condemned by his father and wishes multiple times to be relieved of his father to use his energy on himself. Elie feels guilty when thinking, “If only I were relieved of this responsibility, I could use all my strength to fight for my own survival, to take care only of myself,” (pg. 106, Wiesel). From the prolonged time spent at the camp, the concept of ‘every man for himself’ has imbedded itself into Elie’s head. He wants to abandon his father for a better chance of survival. The camp’s ideals have gotten into his head, and even though his father is feeble from illness and malnutrition he remains emotionally insensitive towards his father. It’s obvious, because of the ideals lingering in his mind Elie has become the type of person he hates, the one who would abandon their kin when push comes to…
Another way Elie shows how speaking up for what is right is very important including family members states “ I began to insult his neighbors. They mocked me. I promised the bread and soup. They laughed. Then they got angry: the could no longer stand my father they say, because he no longer was able to drag himself outside to relieve him.”…
In Never Fall Down, Arn describes how his life was different before the Khmer Rouge came to power. “My little brother and me, we stand in front of the movie palace and sing for them. We do the twist also (McCormick 4)." Even though the reader isn't personally there to see what Arn is doing; the reader connects with Arn's experience. Additionally literature gives the reader an understanding of what goes through others minds. F. Scott Fitzgerald is noted as saying, “That is part of the beauty of literature. You discover that your longings are universal longings, that you’re not lonely and isolated from anyone. You belong.” This quote focuses on how literature frees people from their insecurities and connects people to each other. Furthermore Caesar is noted as saying," In an era of modern media, such as television and movies, people are misled into thinking that every question or problem has its quick answer or solution; however, literature confirms the real complexity of human experience (Ismall)." Following this further, Elie Wiesel's account of the holocaust in Night unveils one of the cruelest genocides known to man. "I heard his voice, grasped the meaning of his words and the dimensions of the moment yet, I did not move (Wiesel)." This exert from the passage illustrates the psychological impact the mistreatment the Jews endured while in concentration camps. Chinua Achebe is noted for saying, “I tell my students, it’s not difficult to identify with somebody like yourself, somebody next door, who looks like you. What’s more difficult is to identify with someone you don’t see, who’s very far away, who’s a different color, who eats a different kind of food. When you begin to do that, then literature is really performing its wonders.” This quotecommunicates how literature unites one person’s life to another. To further the point,…