Night is by a Jewish teenager named Eliezer Wiesel. When the life begins, Eliezer lives in his hometown of Sighet, in Hungarian Transylvania. Eliezer likes to study the Torah and the Cabbala. His teacher Moshe the Beadle has been deported. After a few months, Moshe returns, telling a terrifying story; the German secret police force took charge of the train and led everyone into the woods, regularly slaughtered them. But nobody seems to believe Moshe, who is taken for a maniacal. In the spring, the Nazis take over Hungary. The Jews of Eliezer’s town is forced into small ghettos within Sighet. They were forced onto cattle cars, and a dreadful journey occurs. After days and nights of exhaustion and starvation, the passengers arrive at Birkenau, the gateway to Auschwitz.…
Introduction: Elizer Wiesel was born in the town call Sighet, Transylvania. “Night” is a novel that shows the author’s experience with his father at a German nazi concentration camp. The novel takes place during the height of the Holocaust and almost at the end of World War Two. Night is a great book and I would recommend everybody to read it. It is sad and hard to get through but it is worth it to read.…
Upon the entry to Auschwitz elie was exposed to the horrifying site of babies being used as target practice he didn’t believe this form of cruelty to be possible when Moishe the beetle had told him of it earlier but this was not the only faith shattering sight. They were made to walk up to the fires in which the bodies were being tossed as though that fire would be the end of them. Eli not wanting to suffer such a fate began to summon the will to throw himself upon the electric fence but as his father squeezed his hand he threw away those thoughts and continued walking at that time they had turned from the fires and were now walking towards the blocks. If schlomo hadn’t been there elie wouldn’t have survived.…
Elie Wiesel’s Night, unfolds the lurid tale of a 15-year-old Jewish boy’s imprisonment in a Nazi concentration camp during the Holocaust. Wiesel’s title, merely a single word, embodies the hidden horrors found in the novel. In the concentration camp night signified the time when Wiesel was forced to separate from his father, the only family member he had left. It was during night when Wiesel reached his nadirs of suffering, the loss of his father accompanied by his soul. Night proved to be an inevitable darkness, captivating each person, only satisfied when leaving each to stand alone.…
The book is called “Night” by Elie Wiesel. This book is a first encounter of the Holocaust where Germany prosecuted and sent Jews to camps to be prisoners and tortured or killed. In this personal encounter of Elie he is sent to Auschwitz along with his father, mother, and sister. Elie experiences terrible events that happen at the camp including his father's death and abuse. Throughout the book Faith and Terror were a huge part of the holocaust.…
Night is a memoir by Eliezer Wiesel about his experiences during the holocaust. Even though the Wiesle’s were warned about the imminent Nazi invasion of their home town, Sighet, they stayed, resulting in the Jewish population being sent to concentration camps. Here Elie’s family is split up and the memoir truly begins, you hear the story of Elie and his father's struggle for survival in the concentration camps. Through their struggles Elie and his father change dramatically, but in opposite ways. Elie, growing darker transitioning from being a bright boy- comparable to that of the day- to being cold and harsh like night, and his father growing softer and weaker resembling the soft, eerie, sadness of dusk by the end of the novel.…
I believe that Eliezer lost faith because he didn’t believe he had anyone to believe in. He believed that if his lord was there for him, he wouldn’t be in the position he is in at the time. He would not be fighting for his life in concentration camps where he was being tortured. Other people were relying on their faith because they strongly believed they would get out of it if they pray often. I’m sure that in the end, if his father had not died he would still rely strongly on his faith. After his father died, he wasn’t relying on anyone but himself. He didn’t have to fight for anyone but himself. I believe that is why he didn’t strongly rely on his faith, because he no longer had faith in anyone but himself.…
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.…
The main character and the author in the book, Night is Elie Wiesel. The book Night is about a family going to a concentration camp called Auschwitz. Elie has to make some major life choices. Also, how he changes a lot throughout the story is very noticeable.…
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…
Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed....Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust. Never shall I forget these things, even if I am condemned to live as long as God Himself. Never." ( page 34) - Elie Wiesel. The mass killings in Germany activated against the Jews created a new word, genocide. The Nazi almost exterminated more than half of Jewish, and other. The book ' Night' was about Elie, and how he was sent to the concentration camp with his father, the story tells all of hardship and the endurance that he and his father need to have and how they survive these horrible experiences.…
After having witnessed the crimes that took place in Auschwitz, such as babies being thrown in the crematoria, Eliezer’s faith began to break, he seems to have lost all hope in god and life. “The Almighty, the eternal and terrible Master of the Universe, chose to be silent. What was there to thank him for?” Eliezer seems to have developed hate towards God, he seems confused and hurt by the fact that God allowed the ones who have worshiped him to be burned on his…
The screams of the beating being given, the constant bells controlling everyone like how strings control a puppet, everybody was now a robot with little to no emotion following out orders ad doing labor nonstop; this is how Eliezer, Shlomo, and the rest of the Jewish people would have to live for a period of long drawn out years. Loss of faith. What is the loss of faith? I believe the loss of faith is the will for someone to carry on acting how they would have acted before an event and the loss of hope to carry on with day to day life after a tragic event. From what I think the loss of faith is I do think Eliezer lost faith. I think Eliezer lost faith in others, in God, and in himself.…
Although fear of pain and death were always existent, the captives of these work camps were always fearful of losing friends and family. Even before Elie and his family entered the work camps, fear of losing each other was apparent,…
2. After Eliezer’s father was beaten by Idek, a Kapo, Eliezer says, "I had watched the whole scene without moving. I kept…