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The author Elie Wiesel's relationship with his father was really strong. He was close to his dad than his mother or his sisters. If he would have choose between his father, mother, or his sisters. He definitely will choose his father rather than his mom or sisters. In the quote, "I glanced over at my father. How changed he looked! His eyes were veiled. I wanted to tell him something. But I didn't know what." It tells how Elizer had fear of losing his father that's why he choose to go where his father was going each and everytime. No one can see their father in much pain. So may be because of that he glances at his fathers d says nothing. This tells us that Elie can do anything for his father and he loves him so…
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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…
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“…in the recesses of my weakened conscience, could I have searched it, I might perhaps have found something like –free at last!” (Wiesel 106). After his father dies, Elie feels relieved that he does not have to help or wait for his father anymore. He is happy he only has to worry about himself and about his…
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They had all been dehumanized to an extent that after being freed, they thought “...only of bread”(115). Elie’s family and religion had once been the most important things to him, but after everything Elie had experienced, all he cared about was his next meal and to survive. Elie’s faith was slowly destroyed throughout his experiences of the Holocaust.…
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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…
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Chapter 8: I too, felt relief like Elie from his father’s passing. His father was like “dead weight” to Elie. As cruel as it may be, you must start to think about yourself, especially in a concentration camp. At least, now, Elie can gather up his strength (that is left) and survive the last chapters of the horrible…
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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…
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From the very beginning, Elie, to have a bit of a purpose in the midst of what was happening, decides to be with his father, who is the only remaining member of his family left. “As for me, I was not thinking about death, but I did not want to be separated from my father. We had already suffered so much, borne so much together, this would not be the time to separated” (Wiesel 78). This shows how much Elie cares about his father and wants him to keep on living and make sure they do not get separated from each other, even going as far as to not think about dying, but to just think about his father, also that he was starting to lose interest in anything else but his father. Elie clearly loves his father very much, thinking about everything they have been through, Elie does not want to just give that all up, he thinks that they will make it together to the end and Elie will try to make sure that happens, so that they do not get…
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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…
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Towards the middle of the book, Elie’s father is sent to a different block, and he and Elie have relied on each other up to that point. Elie’s father gives him utensils which will help him with his situation at the moment: “Look, take this knife,” he said to me. “I don’t need it any longer. It might be useful to you. And take this spoon as well. Don’t sell them. Quickly! Go on. Take what I’m giving you!”(Weisel 71). This teaches Elie that no one will be there anymore for him to rely on. He will have to use anything somewhat useful to survive. He can’t trust anyone there, thus having to become selfish. He has to be selfish with what he can find, and what his father gave to him in order to help his situation in Auschwitz. This will be crucial to his survival of the death camp. This isn’t the only time Elie has to rely on himself and be selfish at the death camp. Towards the end of the book, the prisoners at Auschwitz were forced to march many miles away from the camp. The person he was marching next to wasn’t able to keep walking, nonetheless was trampled by the other prisoners. Elie kept on marching because he realized he had to think of himself and rely on only him from then on: “I quickly forgot him. I began to think of myself again.”(Weisel 82). This explains why Elie comes to realize that he can no longer rely on anyone but himself. He can’t think of anyone else and how they are…
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Elie wiesel suffered a lot throughout the holocaust. Throughout the book his life changed significantly but it changed the most in the very beginning when he witnessed what the germans were doing and he wasn't able to convince the others until after the nazis had already come to their home this is what changed his emotions toward things. In the book he said on page 9 “The Jews of Budapest live in an atmosphere of fear and terror. Anti-Semitic acts take place every day, in the…
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Elie and his father have just been separated from the women in their family. Elie’s first reaction is to hold onto his father. Elies remembers that, “In a fraction of a second I could see my mother, my sisters, move to the right. [...] And I walked on with my father, with the men. [...] My hand tightened its grip on my father. All I could think of was not to lose him. [...] It was imperative to stay together” (Wiesel 29-30). Resulting in the end of the separation,all that remained was Elie’s father and Elie. Standing together, frightened, Elie grabs onto his father’s hand. After years of Elie and his father being so distant from each other, at this moment, they created a bond, which brings them closer. Elie is looking at his father for protection no matter what happens to them. Even with the loss of their family, Elie and his father have become the closest they have ever been. Scholarly reviewer, Ellen Fine, states,“[...] being stripped bare of all possessions, he is fixated on one thought - to be with his father” (Fine 55). Fine is stating that Elie has only one view, which is to be with his father no matter what happen or has happened to…
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Elie sees his fellow inmates harass each other for the sake of their own survival, which ultimately leads him to lose his faith in humankind. Undeniably, he once believed in the power and unity of the Jewish people. After being sent to the small ghetto in the cattle car to Birkenau, Auschwitz, Mrs. Schächter was hallucinating, yet the other passengers were sympathetic and…
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Our motivations are what get us up in the morning and get us through the day. They are also more long term in that our specific motivators may determine the direction in which we take our lives and what we decide to do with our time. It can often be difficult to identify these motivators in ourselves. One way to see these motivators is to compare and contrast oneself to others. In Liz Murray’s memoir Breaking Night, she describes her hard and challenging life up until the moment that she was accepted into Harvard University. Although Liz’s life is quite different than mine, some aspects of ourselves and our motivations are the same, but of course there are also differences between them as well.…
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The first person narrative is used in novels and short stories in order to provide the reader with a more intimate view of what is being told. Stories like these often contain parenthetical statements in which a narrator chooses to interrupt writing in order to convey a personal remark. These comments evoke an effect on the reader. Clarice Lispector’s The Hour of the Star and Ludmilla Petrushevskaya’s “The Time is Night” each contain several instances where this literary technique is used. Through analyzing the usage of parenthetical interjections within each piece it is possible to see why narrators choose to introduce comments using parentheses.…
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