“Night” by Elie Wiesel focuses on Wiesel’s experience with his father in the Nazi German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944 and 1945, toward the end of the Second World War. It all begins in 1941 with Eliezer is a twelve-year-old boy living in Sighet. He is the only son in an Orthodox Jewish family and is evidently quite religious. Eliezer learns the truth about World War II and the Holocaust through his teacher, Moshe the Beadle who was deported and escaped. When Moshe returns he tells everyone about how the people deported were being killed and tortured. Nobody believed Moshe until they themselves were being shoved in train cars and taken to Auschwitz. When they reached the gates of Auschwitz Eliezer and his family are…
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 Night, Elie Wiesel goes through a journey as he and his fellow Jews are deported to the concentration camp in Auschwitz. There, for the first time in his life, he is tested with his beliefs as he encounters and witnesses acts of barbarity. Through this, Elie discovers that atrocities and cruel treatment can turn decent people into brutes. Unfortunately, Elie is one of those people – he does not escape this fate.…
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.…
Wiesel’s ‘Night’ is a classic depiction of the Jewish struggle during World War Two. The novel follows young Elie as he is put in the horror of the concentration camps “Auschwitz” and “Buna”. With depth and wonderful writing a reader can understand Elie’s views of the struggles in the camps very easily. Elie like many other Jews changes through out his time in the camps; although he changes drastically he tries his best to keep his morals. Over the two year fight for survival he will morph into…
One of the survivors and author of his own personal life Elie Wiesel was a victim of the Holocaust. Elie witnessed his own father get beaten and tortured in front of him, yet he stayed still and felt crushed inside” my son, they are beating me!” “ who?” I thought he was delirious.”…
When you and your family are all forced into a death camp, separated, and treated as subhuman, you tend to protect the only ones you love enough to risk your life for. In the camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau, one teenager and his father find themselves in exactly that dilemma, starving and with only each other to rely on. Elie Wiesel, a child thrown into these camps with his father, miraculously survived and went on to write about his experiences and struggles, most notably in his memoir Night. This book shows what really happened behind the scenes of Nazi Germany during World War 2, things that would not be revealed for years to come. And more specifically, it shows how Elie's relationships to his father and to the…
Elie Wiesel could be described as your normal, average boy who loved his family, friends, and God. All this changed when WW2 began. Wiesel’s whole life got turned upside down and changed. Wiesel, along with his father, got sent to a concentration camp. In that camp they had lost everything, their personal possessions, their family, and even their will to live. In Night, Elie Wiesel uses diction, imagery, and tone to illustrate the loss of humanity during the holocaust. Loss of humanity was a huge theme during the holocaust because of all the things they had lost and the way the Naziz did this.…
One complex conflict in Elie Wiesel’s Night is the conflict between Elie and himself (Man vs. Himself) that over layers the conflict where the Nazis continuously killed and beat Jews with no sympathy (Man vs. Man). The complex conflict helps to convey the theme Hatred and Death. Elie struggles to be the sole supporter for his father, who is constantly being beaten for unnecessary reasons by the Nazis. Along the journey to Gleiwitz, Elie ran with an injured foot willing to just give up and surrender his life for his foot because such great pains. When Elie saw his father veer near him as they continued their run, Eli saw how” out of breath, out of strength, desperate (Wiesel 86)” he was and Elie stated “My father’s presence was the only thing that stopped me (Wiesel 86). Elie’s comment provides an indirect characterization for Elie as a caring and loving son that would not leave his father to fight alone for he knew he was his father’s future. Due to the fact that Elie contemplated to whether to kill himself or support his father as he hangs on the thread between life and death. The Nazis were aggressive and unsympathetic for their well-being. Elie’s father was struggling to survive the journey for whosoever slowed down or stopped running at the pace were either shot or trampled. “They had orders to shout anyone who could not sustain the pace. Their finger on the triggers, they did not deprive themselves of the pleasure (Wiesel 85)” exploits the theme Hatred as the Jews hold on for dear life that the Nazis feel amusing, “they did not deprive themselves of the pleasure”. The Nazis in fact hated the Jews for multiple reasons and loved how the Jews memory was slowly fading. Due to Elie’s difficult choices and the hatred that the Nazis act upon through the layering of conflicts, Wiesel precisely shapes the themes of Hatred and Death.…
Rick Yune, an American actor, producer, martial artist, and screenwriter, once said,“It's a rare thing when a father and son can share the same experience” (Rick Yune). The relationship of the quote, relates to Elie and his father because it demonstrates that father and son rarely get to encounter the same situation together and when they do, it is something that is not forgotten. During Night, father and son become closer together due to the experience they encountered, while at the concentration camps. Once at the concentration camps, and separated from the rest of the Wiesel family, Elie and his father create an attachment for one another, one of which they would not of had without experiencing the Holocaust. Throughout Elie Wiesel’s memoir,…
Millions upon millions of Jews died during World War II in an era called the Holocaust; Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, is just one story from one man’s perspective of the horrifying event. Wiesel sets the dark and depressing tone with great word choices of the heartbreaking sights he has been forced to see and encounter. This holocaust survivor has been through so much and he is trying to set in stone what Hitler and the Nazis did before it is wiped away like most of the history people do not like to face. Night is a great memoir which tests the readers on if they still will have a faith in humanity after they pass through the last page.…
Night is based on a young boy named Elie Wiesel, This book mainly talks about what he went through during the Holocaust. And how he felt through every single thing he experienced. Wiesel uses figurative language and sensory imagery throughout Night to establish his lost of faith in God through his experience during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel uses sensory imagery and figurative language throughout the memoir Night to convey his determination and perseverance to stay alive. These techniques help Wiesel get his message across to readers by providing the audience with visual images in their head to help them fully understand the meanings and significance along with essential details throughout the memoir. My thesis statement matters, because it helps visualize Wiesel’s writing strategy, in which gets his message across to the readers.…
When children are young, they possess an ignorance about their parents’ unerring wisdom. Children progress through life following their parent’s guidance and hold the words said to them at heart. However, when the mind and body continually develops within a child they lose this naive impressionability and during this time they are able to comprehend the truth. This being they have to realize that their parents do not know everything, which understandably leads to dissatisfaction. In Elie Wiesel’s Night, Elie undergoes a similar transformation alongside his father as Elie experiences his father’s conspicuous change. Under the perpetual cruelty and harsh conditions faced in the concentration camps, Elie’s exasperation steadily evolves. His father is the stemming of his…
What if your dreams never amounted to anything more than a dream. What would be the point of dreaming that dream? For many Jewish people during The Holocaust dreams were nothing but a lie. The Holocaust took away the their dreams. In turn the lost all reason to hope. Still, there are some people who made through The Holocaust. They were able to accomplish something, as commonplace as living to the next day, through their connections. Elie Wiesel wrote his memoir so that American People could bear witness to the effects of The Jewish people's connections.…
“One of the legacies of the Holocaust is the sheer scale of one group of people's inhumanity towards other groups of people. In the case of the Jews, the German government and German society attempts to redefine them as sub-human, and then as creatures who deserve to die. In Night, Elie Wiesel describes how dreadful and maniacal their experience of the Holocaust became in their point of view. The book also looks at what it is like for an adolescent to live in a situation where he and those around him are no longer treated as humans. The loss of humanity among the victims leads to all kinds of cruelty and callousness among the prisoners as they struggle to survive and leads them to lose faith in their god, and, at least for Elie, to become closer to his father more than in the past.”…