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    vastly between the two authors. Night is a work by Elie Wiesel about his experience with his father in the Nazi Germany concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944–1945 (Night book.). Elie became motivated to write this novel because he felt he was obligated to share the gruesome experiences felt by Jews during that time period. Many scholars agree that “Elie Wiesel wrote the book "Night" as a memoir of his experiences as a Jew during the Holocaust. He calls himself a "messenger

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    That’s when I knew that I was going to write.” Elie Wiesel in Conversation with Elie Wiesel “I owe them my roots and memory. I am duty-bound to serve as their emissary‚ transmitting the history of their disappearance‚ even if it disturbs‚ even if it brings pain. Not to do so would be to betray them‚ and thus myself.” Elie Wiesel‚ “Why I Write‚” in Confronting the Holocaust: The Impact of Elie Wiesel One of the primary themes or messages Elie Wiesel said he has tried to deliver with Night

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    increased violence‚ human rights violations‚ war crimes‚ and genocide. When there is severe hatred and aversion towards a different group‚ it can direct to classifying the rival as inhuman and treating them with bestial punishment. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel‚ the Jews were victims of the Nazis and were dehumanized to the equivalence of animals‚ treated horribly‚ and faced with the challenge of survival daily. The most common example of dehumanization in the book was what they were called. The Jews

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    Elie Wiesel stepped out a changed man with a determination to carry on and speak the voices of the dead‚ in an attempt to awaken the rest of the world from its slumber of hazy ignorance. He also came out a lonely survivor‚ silence finally consuming his father at the end of it all. That was not his only loss however; although he still acknowledges the existence of a God‚ it does not necessarily mean he is still faithful. He used to burn as bright as a star‚ but by the end‚ he was nothing more than

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    missing an opportunity you know could have offered a path for escape -knowing that you can pinpoint an exact moment in time that could have altered the course of your story. The Wiesel family is no exception to this statement. The novel‚ Night‚ by “Elie Wiesel” is a survivor’s story of his experiences in the Holocaust. It is an autobiography of his life before and during the concentration camps. In these times the path was not always straight and the overwhelming circumstances caused people to make

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    Survivor of Holocaust In Elie Wiesel’s Night (1960)‚ Eliezer Weisel deals with the harsh brutality of the Holocaust. He uses mental attributes such as determination and faithfulness to overcome the harsh environment and events that he manages with. His despondency is a result of all of his misery. With his mental attributes‚ he hardly survives‚ but his despondency is a result of his loss of hope because he has suffered emotionally‚ spiritually‚ and physically. Eliezer’s determination allows him

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    something that‚ in reality‚ does not exist. This definition is true to the word’s use because we as the readers know that the joy of the Jewish New Year was simply masking the daily terror and misery of life in a concentration camp. I believe that Elie Wiesel broke his silence about his Holocaust experience because he remembered all of the people that had stayed silent while immoral and corrupted things were happening directly in front of them. One instance of staying silent is shown in his biography

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    their thoughts to themselves and are afraid to speak for other people. Just like in the book Night‚ Elie was concerned about the other Jews being taken to extermination camps‚ however his father told him not to worry about it because it wasn’t them being taken and they lived in denial that anything as unpleasant of what was reality was happening to the Jews and the same would happen to them. Until Elie and his family were captured‚ he continued to believe what his father said by not taking a stand and

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    the world. The book "Night" by Elie Wiesel captures Wiesel’s haunting experience during the Holocaust. A book like this is one that is not read for enjoyment‚ but rather for information. If one wants to be able to at least imagine what the people in the concentration camps went through‚ then this is the book to read. Night does not sugar-coat what happened in those camps. Wiesel tells the world what it was really like to live behind those barbed-wire fences. Elie Wiesel wrote "Night" to inform the

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    “To forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time” (Elie Wiesel). This is but one of many insightful quotes we can take from Elie Wiesel’s Night. In my eleven years of schooling in which time I have read over one hundred novels; Night is by far the most captivating and suspenseful. This is the best book of its kind because of the rare firsthand telling by Holocaust victim Elie Wiesel. Using his firsthand account of The Holocaust‚ Wiesel communicates a vivid telling which enables readers

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