Briefly, in the first chapter, Wiesel had stated “I pray to God within me for the strength to ask Him the real questions” (Wiesel 5). It is clear where Wiesel stands with God, which is looking for God’s answers to his questions of life and its purposes. Wiesel looked to God to help him figure out life when he was confused or needed him. Wiesel then opened up about God more in the fifth chapter, where he was experiencing the Holocaust in full effect. According to Jane Elizabeth in “An essay on Night”, Elie Wiesel describes eating on Yom Kippur, a traditional day of fasting and atonement of sins, as an act of defiance against a God in whose mercy he no longer believes. Yet he feels a great emptiness within him, as his identity, and thus his humanity, depended on his …show more content…
There’s many times in the memoir where Wiesel helped others or even himself to save himself. This unexpectedly led his survival through this tragedy. Wiesel been aware of his and his Dad’s fate of labor, whereas his family’s fate was of death during the selection process. Though he was aware of such thing, he still responded to his uncle, which he found, with a sense of hope. His uncle Stein asked about his wife and young boys being alive, Wiesel lied and said that they were doing good and this caused his uncle to weep in joy (Wiesel 43-44). Though Wiesel knew clear of the Jewish women and young children's fate in the Holocaust, he was still capable of keeping a hopeful mind and expressing good news towards his uncle. Though this seems of slim help towards Wiesel’s survival, expressing hope has clearly grew on others and himself to step out the tragedy and express some form of relief. Hope still shown up in his experience, but the only thing is that it came from a stranger to Wiesel.The women at Wiesel’s laborsite exposed her ability to speak German and spoke to Wiesel during his brutal beating. She states, “ Bite your lips, little brother … Don’t cry. Keep your anger, your hate, for another day. That day will come but not now … Wait. Clench your teeth and wait.” (Wiesel 53). This does not seem as important, but in Wiesel’s memoir, he purposely only stated a few parts of his experience for a