Man vs. Man is one of the many conflicts in the book “Night” written by the late Elie Wiesel. Wiesel expresses that it was him against the Nazi soldiers for they were ordered to beat the Jews and often times kill them. They were forced out of their homes and, “the Hungarian Police made them climb into the [cattle] cars, eighty persons in each one” (22). After going through many mentally damaging experiences, the Jews soon began to turn on each other. During transport, bystanders threw a piece of bread at the passing men, and an old man managed to snatch it. Everyone, including his son, jumped on him “when they withdrew, there were two dead bodies next to [Wiesel], the father and the son” (102). Later when Wiesel’s father was dying of dysentery,…
The Terrible Things by Eve Bunting, follows the theme of impending doom but no one wanting to believe it. We also view this theme in Elie Wiesel's Night and Martin Niemoller's First They Came For The Communists. In Eve Buntings interpretation of the Holocaust they show that even though the terrible things kept coming and taking animals away, the other animals didn't worry because it wasn't them. We see this become apparent on page four. The terrible things came for, ¨...Every creature with feathers on it´s back,¨ in response, the animals without feathers retorted, ¨We don't have feathers… nor we… nor we,¨ However, it states that after the birds were taken away things went back to almost normal. We also see this happen in Elie Wiesel's Night,…
Alternatively, in our modern day world some people still keep their thoughts to themselves and are afraid to speak for other people. Just like in the book Night, Elie was concerned about the other Jews being taken to extermination camps, however his father told him not to worry about it because it wasn’t them being taken and they lived in denial that anything as unpleasant of what was reality was happening to the Jews and the same would happen to them. Until Elie and his family were captured, he continued to believe what his father said by not taking a stand and defending other people for what is right. Unfortunately, the same type of events still take place, whether it’s a dictatorship in another country, to something such as bullying. For…
The book “Night” and its topic of the concentration camps of Auschwitz and Buchenwald is very essential to the story. Wiesel describes these camps with great detail and emotion which got my attention and curiosity. With the research I have collected I learned that Auschwitz and Buchenwald were two major concentration camps to the Nazis in Germany that were mainly for either executing prisoners or forcing them to work in a variety of different fields. These two camps were known more as complexes due to the many sub camps both Auschwitz and Buchenwald had. Concentration camps were a key to the Nazi’s plan of annihilation of people who they had no interest in, either because of their racial or social qualities. Some examples included Jews, prisoners of war, bisexuals, and the mentally disordered.…
The autobiographical novel ‘Night’ which was first published in 1958 is a story of the real traumatic experiences that those of a Jewish descent encountered during the Holocaust in 1944. The author, Elie Wiesel conveys a powerful memoir of inhumanity, death and loss of faith to the reader. Throughout the novel the protagonist endures extreme and brutal circumstances which causes him to lose faith in god. The inhumanity and dehumanization acts Elie experiences causes him to feel mentally dead inside…
The book Night, by Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, gives a firsthand account of the events that took place. Several recurring themes, motifs, and symbols are used by Wiesel to show the beliefs and ultimate moral decline that enveloped the minds of many Jewish survivors.…
Dehumanization is to deprive of human qualities such as individuality, compassion, or civility. In this book set in World War II, it is shown to us how Jews were dehumanized by Nazis into a little more than “things”. Graphic images are drawn into our head as a young Elie Wiesel retells what he saw.…
Amongst the many events that the world has captured in history books, the holocaust is one that is recognized by almost everyone. The Holocaust was a controlled, state financed torture and killing of roughly six million Jews by the Nazi government led by Adolf Hitler. While many Jews died in the concentration camps, there are some who made it out alive and told their story. Their witness accounts contribute information the world needs to understand what really took place in Germany and the concentration camps. Author, Elie Wiesel, voices his time in the Nazi concentration camps, in his autobiographical novel, Night. Throughout the story, Wiesel physically, mentally, and spiritually changes due to the horrific events of the holocaust.…
There were a few different parts of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Furthermore, it was three different types of camps that were brought together: concentration camp, extermination, and labor camp (“Auschwitz was the largest camp”). All three camps played a major part in the Nazi’s “final solution” (Berenbaum). There were also subcamps part of Auschwitz. In just two years, 44 subcamps were built (1942 to 1944). Auschwitz also had different leaders. The first of the three leaders who controlled all of the Auschwitz concentration camps was SS Lieutenant Colonel Rudolf Hoess (“The Auschwitz concentration camp complex”).Meanwhile, there were many things inside of Auschwitz. For instance, Auschwitz contained electrically charged barbed wire, machine…
The purpose of Take Back the Night was to promote awareness and support survivors of rape, sexual assault and relationship violence among students and nonstudents. I also think the goal was to unify the community by allowing survivors to open up about incidents of abuse/assault within their lives. I observed the audiences reactions when the audience showed lots of support to the survivors that were telling their stories of assault and abuse. Whenever a survivor would leave the stage the audience would applaud the survivor for being courageous. Also close friends of the survivor would reach out and hug and give words of encouragement to the survivors. Also the men who were in the audience were shocked and in disbelief when they heard some of…
In the beginning of Night, written by Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel, Wiesel has been in the concentration camps suffering changes in his life, physically, mentally, and spiritually. In the beginning of Night, Wiesel’s identity is an innocent child and a devouted Jew. He was a happy child with a desire to study the Talmud, until his experience in Auschwitz, in which he changed his mental ways.…
The ground is frozen, parents weep over their children, stomachs void, rigid bodies huddle together to stay warm. This was a reoccurring scene during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel’s Night describes the horror of what the Holocaust did, not only to the Jews, but to humanity. The disturbing neglect the Nazi party had for human beings, and the human body itself, still to this day, intensifies the fear in the hearts of many. Men, woman, and children alike witnessed selfish, dehumanizing acts, the deaths of their friends and family, and not only the loss of faith in God, but in everything.…
Wiesel addresses the theme of mankind’s inhumanity towards others as he recounts the event on a passenger ship involving the Parisian woman and the native children fighting for a coin in the water. He connects this moment to the horrific scene on the train where men fought to death for scraps of food and German soldiers laughed. We humans can sometimes be the most inhumane, from all the destruction we cause to the pain and suffering we create.…
Imagine yourself being trapped in a small metal box that gradually constricts your body. It squeezes you until your very being caves in and you breathe one’s last. This is how isolation in concentration camps transforms your tranquil soul into a raving madman. Night, a memoir by holocaust survivor and professor, Elie Wiesel, paints the horrors of isolation and how its knives will carve away your flesh and hope until there’s nothing but a vile corpse. In order to avoid the assured effects of this ‘solitary confinement’ in the concentration camps, having loved ones were beneficial because they needed one another to talk to, keep each other strong, and predominantly to keep each other sane.…
In the novel “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Elie Wiesel tells the story of his life in the Auschwitz concentration camps. Mr. Wiesel was born in the town of Sighet, Transylvania and was only a teenager when he and his family were taken from their home he called the “ghetto”. Although they all had been worn by Moishe the Beadle, about his terrible story in which no one believed him and though he was a mad man. Nevertheless the Germen army arrived shortly, and all Jews where obligated to wait outside until there train was to come for them and take them. Once in the train arrived and it was there; soon it was Elie Wiesel and his family turn to get, on lying down was not an option or even siting down. The air was little and there was little food and thirst became a big problem as so did the heat. Then the train stop in Kaschau in Czechoslovakia and a German officer stepped in and told all the Jews in the train that they were know under the German army authority and to give them all there gold and silver. The Jews where treated like dogs and threaten to get shot if anyone went missing. After that the train continued to its destination, with in the train there was a woman named Mrs. Schachter a woman in here fifties started to cry out “Fire! I see a fire! I see a fire!” she did this many times and the Jews got tired of it after a while so the beat her, so she would stop crying. Once they arrived to their final destination Auschwitz she scram fire for the last time, but this time there was fire and shortly everyone had to get off the train the air smelled like burning flesh. After getting off Elie Wiesel was separated from his mother and sisters with he never saw again but stayed with his father. After separated Elie Wiesel saw as children and old where being burned and hoped it was all just a dream. Elie Wiesel was close to being thrown in the fire pit, but instead him and his father where forced to run to the showers and then to Block 17 where…