and God answers. But we don’t understand His answers. We can’t understand them. Because they come from the depths of the soul‚ and they stay there until death. You will find the true answers‚ Eliezer‚ only within yourself!" (Wiesel 2-3) In the beginning‚ before the Jews of Sighet were evacuated Elie was very devout. During the day‚ he studied the Talmud and at night he ran to weep over the destruction of the temple. One day‚ Elie came home and asked his father to find him a Master to teach him
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the left and women to the right. Although he does not know it at the moment‚ this is the last time Eliezer will ever see his mother and youngest sister Tzipora. All Eliezer can think of now is to not lose his father. Already some Jews are being beaten and shot. Eliezer and his father are asked by one of the prisoners about their ages. On hearing that Eliezer is fifteen and his father fifty‚ the inmate tells them they should be eighteen and forty. Age can mean the difference between life and death
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ultimately no thought of in my day to day life. For Elie Wiesel‚ during his stay in a Nazi Concentration Camp‚ death was everywhere. Death was upon his family‚ friends‚ and lingered heavily upon him throughout his time spent as a prisoner at various concentration camps. In his world death was reality‚ death was everyday life. Death was even in the air as crematoriums burned the dead up into ashes. What I found so profoundly amazing within Wiesel ’s book‚ Night‚ was the realness of something as a fortunate
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The book Night by Elie Wiesel describes his time in the concentration camps during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel’s life before The Holocaust was studying the Jewish religion day and night. During the day he would go to school to study religion and at night would go to the Synagogue to pray. He did the exact same thing every day. He was static and unchanging. But when he was forced into the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland‚ he had to adapt for it. This was the only way he would survive. EIie had
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Period 1 28 March 2017 Synthesis Essay “To forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time.”― Elie Wiesel. In the memoir‚ The Night by Elie Wiesel tells a story how twelve-year-old Elie Wiesel himself spends much time in trainloads of Jews to the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp. In a train car eighty villagers have to survive on slightest food and water. When Elie Wiesel is 16 the United States Army in April 1945 saved him‚ but it was too late for his father‚ who died after a beating
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Relationships in Night In the novel Night tells an autobiography about Elie’s time in the Holocaust and the book explains how the relationships with his father‚ and God change in the event of the time he spent during the Holocaust. One relationship that changes over the course of this novel is Elie’s relationship with his father. At the beginning of Wiesel’s story he has almost no relationship with his father. His father was more involved with the Jewish community‚ and it left no
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Elie Wiesel is one of the countless number of people affected by the Holocaust. He and his father were taken from their home and separated from his mother and sister. Elie Wiesel wrote the book Night which tells some of the struggles they had to endure. Throughout these struggles‚ keeping faith in God was not easy to do. Many times Elie doubted that there was a God to help. In chapter three‚ Elie and his father waited in line with the rest of the people to find out if they were to go to the prison
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Night Elie Wiesel His record of childhood in the death camps of Auschwitz and Buchenwald Born in a Hungarian ghetto‚ Elie Wiesel was sent as a child to the nazi death camps of Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Night is the story of that atrocity; here he relates his childhood perceptions of an inhumanity that was as painful as it was absolute. Night uses three specific types of narration making it relevant to different sets of people‚ yet somehow the whole world: individualistic - as seen specifically
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Silent Night While reading “Night” by Elie Wiesel‚ I came across a lot of key ideas and themes that ran consistently through out the book. Three major ideas that I felt were important were Elie’s trial to keep faith in his God‚ the use of silence and night and finally‚ having to keep your mind at ease amongst all the inhumanity. Although these ideas are different‚ they play off of one another. Elie’s biggest struggle is to maintain his belief and fate in God’s hands. Elie’s battle with his faith
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Elie Wiesel’s Night provides the reader with the perspective of a Jewish adolescent during the Holocaust. The Holocaust was a historical time period of hate and fear projected by the Nazi party against Jews and other minorities from January 30th‚ 1933‚ to May 8th‚ 1945. During this time period‚ minorities were kept in concentration and forced labor camps. Those who could not contribute to the cause were executed. Elie Wiesel’s Night portrays the horrors faced in these camps as his faith begins to
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