Packed into cattle trains, the Jews are tortured in unbearable conditions. There is barley any air for them to breath, extreme heat, very little food or water, and they are all packed. It is almost as if they are in a survival mode. In their desperation, they lose their hope in the government and their hope in people. They stop denying what is in front of them and they begin to accept and understand what might actually happen. After days of the brutal conditions, the train arrives at the Czechoslovakian Border. They then realize that they are not being relocated. Soon a German officer opens the train and says if they don't hand over their valuables then they will be shot and if there are not 80 of them, then all will be killed. This was another realization of how this situation is really bad.…
In Night, Elie Wiesel used his words to describe his experiences in a way that evoked many emotions for me; those being upset, horrified, and outraged.…
Maturing is a natural process in a person's life that happens in one form or another to everyone. Most people mature over time and take a few years to fully finish this process, ending only once they reach adulthood. For others however, the process of maturing is forced upon them somehow and they have no other choice but to mature or they will not survive. Elie was living a happy life with his family when the Germans came and took him and his family away. When they were taken to a concentration camp, Elie had to give up his childish beliefs in order to ensure that himself and his father both survive. In Night, Elie Wiesel uses the idea of how he was forced to mature in order to show how he as a result has lost his humanity.…
Night, by Elie Wiesel, is a work of Holocaust literature, although it has a decidedly autobiographical slant. Wiesel based the book--at least in part--on his own experiences during World War II. The book has received considerable acclaim, and the author received the Nobel Prize in 1986. Here are a few quotes from Wiesel's famous novel.…
“Sustainability is the key to our survival on this planet and will also determine success on all levels ”-Shari Arison. “Night” by Elie wiesel was published on september 1960. This book is about a boy named Elie, he and his family are Jewish. This was during the time wee Hitler was in charge and he wanted to make sure all Jews were gone. Germans thought they were superior and that they were suppose to be the only people in the world. Elie goes through a lot because of this, he has to go on some very unfortunate and terrible rides, he separates from his family and he goes to a concentration camp. In the camp he has horrible experiences. He is treated as a slave and he constantly is fighting for his life. He fights for his life through…
The author creates and develops the motif dehumanization by writing about how it is possible to destroy someone’s humanity and its capacity for empathy. Elie Wiesel wrote, “Spectators observed these emaciated creatures ready to kill for a crust of bread” (101). Elie notably reveals that the Kapos abuses them past their capacity which ends up with the prisoners losing their humanity to distinguish right from wrong and their morality. Wiesel additionally wrote, “I was nothing but a body. Perhaps even less.” (52). Expressively, the Kapos damages Elie to a point where pain turns into numbness and all Elie feels is an abyss of indifference and apathy due to the fact that the camp vanished his soul and identity away from him. The author…
In Elie Wiesel’s book “Night”, uses eyes and/or night to demonstrate people’s humanity within the camps and throughout the book. I will be talking about Moche the Beadle, Elie and the little boy who was hanged.…
k.) Tim takes Kitkat to time travel back to New year party with him and hold Kitkat away from Jimmy. When they come back to the present, Kitkat tells Tim that she is happier with Jay.…
In the novel, nighttime is used to symbolize a period of both physical and spiritual darkness, death, and Elie’s loss of faith in god. This is the first mention during the first few chapters when Elie compares his life to an endless night: “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.”…
This quote is important because we see how much Elie has changed since he first entered the concentration camp. He has changed so much to the point that he barely recognizes himself, He looks himself in the mirror and doesn’t see the Elie that he once knew because all of the suffering and torture he has been though. Another reason Elie might be seeing a dead body when he looks in a mirror is because that’s all he has been seeing for the past months! People being killed right in front of him and at such a young age it has to have him messed up in some type of way.…
In the novel “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Elie Wiesel tells the story of his life in the Auschwitz concentration camps. Mr. Wiesel was born in the town of Sighet, Transylvania and was only a teenager when he and his family were taken from their home he called the “ghetto”. Although they all had been worn by Moishe the Beadle, about his terrible story in which no one believed him and though he was a mad man. Nevertheless the Germen army arrived shortly, and all Jews where obligated to wait outside until there train was to come for them and take them. Once in the train arrived and it was there; soon it was Elie Wiesel and his family turn to get, on lying down was not an option or even siting down. The air was little and there was little food and thirst became a big problem as so did the heat. Then the train stop in Kaschau in Czechoslovakia and a German officer stepped in and told all the Jews in the train that they were know under the German army authority and to give them all there gold and silver. The Jews where treated like dogs and threaten to get shot if anyone went missing. After that the train continued to its destination, with in the train there was a woman named Mrs. Schachter a woman in here fifties started to cry out “Fire! I see a fire! I see a fire!” she did this many times and the Jews got tired of it after a while so the beat her, so she would stop crying. Once they arrived to their final destination Auschwitz she scram fire for the last time, but this time there was fire and shortly everyone had to get off the train the air smelled like burning flesh. After getting off Elie Wiesel was separated from his mother and sisters with he never saw again but stayed with his father. After separated Elie Wiesel saw as children and old where being burned and hoped it was all just a dream. Elie Wiesel was close to being thrown in the fire pit, but instead him and his father where forced to run to the showers and then to Block 17 where…
Throughout any human’s life you are going to face hardships, and the decisions you make in those troubling times prove who you truly are. Even when you feel like it is just you against the world, your family should always have your back. For some people all they have is their family, and those people will stand in the face of danger to protect one of their own. Alas, a plentiful amount of people would rather believe in self-preservation when their family is in the midst of a life threatening altercation. Basically, these people in particular would not go out of their way to save a relative from the grips of death, instead they would rather escape with their own lives. In the novel Night by Elie Wiesel, the theme of father and son relationships is haunted by self-preservation over love and loyalty.…
Genocide, a word that has affected millions yet it’s a crime that has never been committed. Millions have been killed due to a belief that they are subordinate as a group, yet genocide has not ever been declared. With over 10 million dead, where are the survivors? What compelled them to persevere and strive towards survival? Well, Elie Wiesel lived to tell the story. Elie tells about his struggles in his novel called Night. He speaks upon what had happened to him and his family in the holocaust, and what ultimately led him to living through the holocaust. The reason he is alive today and was able to tell the story, is because of his persistence to live, his mental strength to keep going, and his overall grit to become one of the historic survivors that he is today.…
Hunger. Terror. Despair. Flames. Death. These are just a few things men and women saw during the time at Auschwitz, Gleiwitz, and Buchenwald. Separated from their family members, these people felt many hardships. In this essay, I will evaluate how men and women that were dehumanized had the will to survive despite starvation, physical labor and fear of separation. Night is essentially Elie Wiesel’s memoir about his experiences in the Holocaust while Worms from Our Skin tells about Mam’s excruciating experiences on Khmer Rouge.…
1. “ The shadows beside me awoke as from a long sleep. They fled, silently, in all directions.” (Wiesel pg 12)- Personification. Wiesel uses this deep personification with a hint of symbolism to give the effect that shadows can wake up just as living organisms do. Yet a shadow is non-living and cannot truly wake up. At the time of Wiesel’s choice of personification, his whole family has just heard news that they are to leave their home in the morning. He is told by his father to wake up the neighbors, but instead shadows are the only things that wake. This somewhat hints at the profound deeper meaning of where they are actually going to be taken and how that might affect them.…