Before the Holocaust, something that Elie fears is what Moshe the Beadle says about what he saw when he went to the concentration camps. Moshe claims to have seen babies being thrown into the air and used as targets and people digging graves just to go up to the hole and present their …show more content…
From the very beginning, Elie, to have a bit of a purpose in the midst of what was happening, decides to be with his father, who is the only remaining member of his family left. “As for me, I was not thinking about death, but I did not want to be separated from my father. We had already suffered so much, borne so much together, this would not be the time to separated” (Wiesel 78). This shows how much Elie cares about his father and wants him to keep on living and make sure they do not get separated from each other, even going as far as to not think about dying, but to just think about his father, also that he was starting to lose interest in anything else but his father. Elie clearly loves his father very much, thinking about everything they have been through, Elie does not want to just give that all up, he thinks that they will make it together to the end and Elie will try to make sure that happens, so that they do not get