“You’ve got what it takes, but it will take everything you got.” In the end Elie had what it took to survive and live but when he saw himself in the mirror for the first time after the concentration camps he was shocked. He found out this terrible journey took everything out of him. Night after night Elie was put through so much, cold nights, long runs, starvation, and hard labour. The most important decisions in the novel that one chooses is strongly tied with the outcome and the end.
Elie was put into this situation at at a young age and it took everything he has just to achieve freedom. “To forget the dead would akin to killing them a second time,” is truly remarkable coming from someone who’s going through so much. Elie and his father were very faithful and when his father passed away Elie “shall always remember that smile, from what would did it come from.” Elie struggles with his …show more content…
At the start of this whole thing nobody knew what was going on “A prolonged whistle split the air. The wheels began to grind. We were on our way.”(57) Elie was angry with god at many points of his journey and “he did not deny God’s existence, but i doubted his absolute justice.”(42) Elie was angry at many things but “he was thinking of his father. He must have suffered more than I did.”(57) and Elie suffered through so much and he couldn't do anything about it. Elie Wiesel was just happy it was all over.
The most critical decisions in the novel “Night” had so much to do with personal behavior especially through tough times. Elie’s Behavior changed so much throughout the story and it wasn't up to him, it was was he was going throug. Its started with being sent to a ghetto then the trains and so on and that really changed Elie as a person. Elie was angry but what was the point of revenge it not worth it and he realized that when he looked at himself in the