Donald L. Niewyk’s fifth and sixth chapters both deal more with outside perspectives and outside reactions than it does with those who were persecuted. The fifth chapter, “Bystander Reactions,” offers four different arguments as to why bystanders acted they way they did during the Holocaust. The sixth chapter, “Possibilities of Rescue,” discusses three different viewpoints on what foreign governments could have done to prevent the Holocaust. These two chapters conclude Niewyk’s book The Holocaust and wrap up the final sequence of events surrounding the Holocaust and the camps.…
People of America today are mostly sheltered from the poor reality of the world and are protected behind the safety of Laws and the standard social normality. Some people are so ‘protected’ from the real world that they have the impression that the Holocaust never existed. The denial of the Holocaust is assumably one of many reasons writers/prisoners of the Holocaust vocalized their stories. Eli Wiesel the narrator and author of ‘From Night’ expresses his experience as a prisoner of war, held by German Nazis, in his short autobiography. Wiesel employs imagery as a Literary device to reveal how they perceived the dehumanizing and harsh affects of the Holocaust and how they adapted for their survival.…
The renowned memoir Night by Elie Wiesel takes place in Romania and Germany during World War II. This piece of literature depicts a portion of the author’s life at the peak of a global war. At this time in history, many people refused to take notice of what was transpiring in Nazi Germany. In Wiesel’s Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech he said, “Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere.” This declaration is relevant to what happened during the Holocaust in the way that several people neglected the slaying of the Jewish people. This statement by Wiesel is also appropriate to describe certain instances in society today.…
If there was a god, why would he/she be so harsh? The text is compared to the book Night by Ellie Wiesel and from the poems “Night over Birkenau” and “Harbach 1944”. The book Night tells the story of a young boy and his father fighting for their freedom from the Nazis; Ellie Wiesel tells the story of his experience of the Holocaust. Both of the poems show the journeys of people and how they pictured all of the madness. Ellie fights through many hardships, but comes out of the Holocaust victorious! Ellie and his father were both willing and strong throughout the Holocaust, but his father escaped a different way. The theme states that during survival, people think about needs rather than wants. This is clearly developed in the poems “Night over Birkenau” By Janos Piliszky and “Harbach 1944” and Night to show harshness, survival, and fear.…
The Jews had to go through terrible atrocities. They were being treated terribly, but they stood strong against the cruelty. The Jews enduring those terrible acts show how, even while being treated at the lowest levels humans can still persevere, retain their humanity, and live on. This is shown through how they kept their faith, how they treated each other, how they pushed on while being treated like animals, and how they kept on living and pushing on. All of these claims can be explained and supported by, Elie Wiesel's Documentary, his memoir, Night, Maslow's hierarchy of needs, and the official documentary of Night and Fog.…
During a time of conflict one's actions says the personality of oneself and in a desperate act of survival people will do anything to survive. In this sense humans are no more sophisticated than the animals that live in the wild. This shows that one is not what they appear to be and when a time of conflict comes about humans are savages. One will do anything to survive. What would one do in a time of conflict? The answer is unknown, human nature is unpredictable and sometimes that is for the better but it can also be for the worst. One should try to be the best they can be, but in the end it is not determined by…
“For the dead and the living we must bear the witness” (hoodreads.com/quotes/tag/holocaust). The book Night by Elie Wiesel was about the Holocaust taken place in Auschwitz concentration camp. Elie went through ghettos and later on was separated from his and sister; luckily he was with his father. At the concentration camp the people worked hard labors and lived like as slaves from 1944 to the day of liberation (1945). The author’s purpose for writing this novel was to inform the world about the terror and the injustice to humans so the people will not forget and have more caution about their decisions so it does not happen again!…
You would think that America would take a stand for world peace or at least stand up for what it right in this world, but that wasn’t the case during the time of the holocaust. I myself had come up with this preconceived idea that America did just that. Took an immediate stand against what the Nazi’s were doing. Instead America’s reaction was unusually causal.…
Even with the scaled-down conflict that I have experienced, I personally CANNOT remain a bystander. The same goes for the rest of the population, some people have the urge to confront conflict head on, others have the urge to run away.…
More than six million Jews were killed in World War II, with over two million of those killed, being children. The Jews were targeted in a mass genocide by the Nazis’, who ultimately were defeated, but not because of what they were doing to the Jews but because the allied forces were able to stop the Germans military advance. Elie Wiesel, author of Night, a biographical account of the Holocaust, does a skillful job in his narrative, showing us how hard it was for people to grasp the unbelievable possibility of what the Nazis were doing to the Jews. We have to regularly remind ourselves of the atrocities committed during the Holocaust so that we are never lulled into believing that people couldn’t do something…
It would take six million life times or more to replace the lost love of those murdered within the Holocaust. However despite the incomprehensible disregard for humanity witnessed throughout the persecution of Jews, not all had their lives taken from them. Many Jews fought back and whether they succeeded or not- they didn’t go down without a fight. These are a few of many stories in which Jewish citizens used hope and determination to their advantage, to fight for their survival and through resistance, have an impact upon the Holocaust.…
I agree with the statement, “Being a neutral bystander helps those who are evil, that remaining silent encourages even more evil to happen.” Meaning if you do not do anything many people will get hurt and staying quiet never helps a situation. This was the overall topic of Night and how everyone though the Holocaust was.…
The Holocaust can be / and is a sensitive and passionate topic to many people. Reading “Anne Frank’s Diary” and “The Boy in the Striped Pyjama’s”, can cause many to become intrigued about what could cause such an event to happen and devastated about the terrible things people unfortunately had to go through, if they didn’t die beforehand. What many people haven’t thought about greatly until now is how it has affected society today.…
During WWII, many people, specifically Jewish individuals, suffered under Germany’s oppression; many of those people decided to either actively or passively resist. Those who chose to actively resist would use violence to avoid ignominy from dying in a gas chamber. On the other hand, those who passively resisted would attempt to maintain their dignity by surviving the many hardships they were presented with. In “The Diary of Anne Frank” and “Resistance During the Holocaust”, it explains how individuals would use different methods to passively resist. As a response to conflict, people passively resisted by maintaining hope, preserving culture, and providing safety.…
The 1930s and 1940s was a period that greatly revealed the character of people, showing the true ugly side of how people treated people. The atrocities committed by the Nazis and the Japanese Empire from the buildup to WWII and during WWII are the greatest examples of the horrors that people can commit when driven by hate. However, the savagery performed by the Nazis on those they saw unfit in Europe is one of the most documented horrors in history, and the Jews were the majority of victims in the Holocaust. During their survival in Concentration Camps, those who suffered from the Nazis went through many changes in their lives, such as a change in their character, and, or changes in their faith (both in religion and people). The stories Night…