Ethos: In the year of 1928, Eli Wiesel was born into the family of Shlomo Wiesel, his father, and Sarah Feiig, his mother. Elie Wiesel was a Nobel-Prize winner in the year of 1986, and wrote over sixty fiction and nonfiction books over a span of time. In the year of 1955, Wiesel published his most famous book “Night.” “Night” was a book written about Wiesel`s account of the experience he encountered at the German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald from the year of 1944 to 1945. Wiesel`s other accomplishments include winning the Congressional Gold medal, the French Legion of Honor, the International Center in New York`s Award of Excellence, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom.…
“The yellow star? Oh well what of it, you don’t die of it...” (Wiesel 5). This dialogue from a character in the novel expresses the hardships of the Jewish populations during the early time of the holocaust. Dehumanization is when a human feels like their life is not worth anything to even be alive anymore. They feel deprived of all their human qualities. The Germans threw the Jews into harsh concentration camps. They placed sanctions on their everyday ordinary lives. If the guards felt like a person was not worth anything, they would be sent to the gas chamber or an inferno. The Germans were a harsh army that desensitized the life of the Jewish. In the novel Night, translated by Marion Wiesel he describes how a life can be dehumanized at a split second.…
Dehumanization is to deprive of human qualities such as individuality, compassion, or civility. In this book set in World War II, it is shown to us how Jews were dehumanized by Nazis into a little more than “things”. Graphic images are drawn into our head as a young Elie Wiesel retells what he saw.…
Night by Elie Wiesel provided the world with a deep and painful insight to the horrors within the German lines. Throughout the novel, many lines tugged at the heart strings of audience members because they depicted true thoughts of Jewish captives during this time period. Though most of the novel described life in concentration camps, three lines truly portray the feelings, emotions and mindset Jews had under the Nazi regime.…
The ground is frozen, parents weep over their children, stomachs void, rigid bodies huddle together to stay warm. This was a reoccurring scene during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel’s Night describes the horror of what the Holocaust did, not only to the Jews, but to humanity. The disturbing neglect the Nazi party had for human beings, and the human body itself, still to this day, intensifies the fear in the hearts of many. Men, woman, and children alike witnessed selfish, dehumanizing acts, the deaths of their friends and family, and not only the loss of faith in God, but in everything.…
Eliezer and other Jewish people live on the town of sighet, Moishe one of the townspeople warn everybody about the nazis and no one listens, one the jewish are captured, most are killed and tortured. Eliezer and his dad goes through each camps as they experience new ways of how the Nazis dehumanize the jewish people. Wiesel engages readers’ emotions with powerful unforgettable moments in order to achieve his purpose. Wesiel wants to help readers come to a greater understanding of the Holocaust and make them think about how Dehumanization is shown across the story.…
Wiesel addresses the theme of mankind’s inhumanity towards others as he recounts the event on a passenger ship involving the Parisian woman and the native children fighting for a coin in the water. He connects this moment to the horrific scene on the train where men fought to death for scraps of food and German soldiers laughed. We humans can sometimes be the most inhumane, from all the destruction we cause to the pain and suffering we create.…
Amongst the many events that the world has captured in history books, the holocaust is one that is recognized by almost everyone. The Holocaust was a controlled, state financed torture and killing of roughly six million Jews by the Nazi government led by Adolf Hitler. While many Jews died in the concentration camps, there are some who made it out alive and told their story. Their witness accounts contribute information the world needs to understand what really took place in Germany and the concentration camps. Author, Elie Wiesel, voices his time in the Nazi concentration camps, in his autobiographical novel, Night. Throughout the story, Wiesel physically, mentally, and spiritually changes due to the horrific events of the holocaust.…
“Which is worse? Killing with hate or killing without hate?” –Elie Wiesel. One of the most prominent themes in the novel Night is the topic of dehumanization. Throughout the Holocaust the Jews suffered the act of dehumanization, or being deprived humane treatment. From the beginning the Jews were forced to endure the horrible conditions of the Ghettos. They were killed by the thousands in the gas chambers. And some even faced wrath of Dr. Mengele and his torturous experiments.…
The autobiographical novel ‘Night’ which was first published in 1958 is a story of the real traumatic experiences that those of a Jewish descent encountered during the Holocaust in 1944. The author, Elie Wiesel conveys a powerful memoir of inhumanity, death and loss of faith to the reader. Throughout the novel the protagonist endures extreme and brutal circumstances which causes him to lose faith in god. The inhumanity and dehumanization acts Elie experiences causes him to feel mentally dead inside…
Night’ illustrates the horrifying conditions that the Jews suffered while being at the hands of the Nazi’s. While Wiesel and his family along with thousands of Jewish people were under the control of the Germans in the act to exterminate all of the Jews. It all began for Elie’s family at the start, when they were put into ghettos. The ghettos were a part of town that had been fenced off and the Jews were made to stay there until there had been taken to the concentration camps. There was limit food and water there; it was whatever they could basically put in their backpacks. When they finally were on the way to Auschwitz, on the crowded train, there was no food or water for a large number on days. The cattle cars/ train carriages had up to 80 people in each, and they were big they were very small so there was nowhere to sit; they had to take turns of sitting down. The conditions in the camps where just as bad sometimes worse, there was very limited food, they only got a small ration of bread crust and some soup. The Germans would beat the Jews just because they could, they were put into horrible, harsh and cruel conditions but they were put in such violent conditions, watching people and little kids get hung as they were made to stand and watch, or watch as loved…
In the memoir and non-fiction novel Night by Elie Wiesel the author shows a hidden message. I feel that this message is that there are people who do horrible things, but no matter what, you can overcome something horrific you just have to be strong. The novel interprets that power can be used and abused, and power comes in many forms. There are people in this world that will abuse their power, they will harm human beings because of their opinions, but we have the power to fight, to stick by our beliefs, our family and our friends, we have the power to make sure these actions never happens again. Elie shows that the world isn’t perfect and it will never be, there aren’t perfect human beings, most can be cruel. Wiesel shows a reality that most…
Elie Wiesel’s Night, unfolds the lurid tale of a 15-year-old Jewish boy’s imprisonment in a Nazi concentration camp during the Holocaust. Wiesel’s title, merely a single word, embodies the hidden horrors found in the novel. In the concentration camp night signified the time when Wiesel was forced to separate from his father, the only family member he had left. It was during night when Wiesel reached his nadirs of suffering, the loss of his father accompanied by his soul. Night proved to be an inevitable darkness, captivating each person, only satisfied when leaving each to stand alone.…
In Elie Wiesel’s Night, imagery is employed to show the dehumanization of the Jewish people by the Nazis as the Jews develop the “survival of the fittest” mentality, and as Eliezer looses the ability to express emotions. Wiesel uses imagery of the Jews’ “survival of the fittest” mentality to show the dehumanization of the Jews who are forced to endure treacherous conditions in the concentration camps. The enslaved Jews experience the worst forms of inhumane treatment. Pushed beyond their ability to deal with the oppressing starvation, cold, disease, exhaustion, and cruelty, the Jews lose their sanity and morality. Thus, Wiesel refers to the Jews as, “wild beasts of prey with animal hatred in their eyes; an extraordinary vitality had seized them, sharpening their teeth and nails. Men threw themselves on top of each other, stamping on each other, biting each other (Pg. 95 old book)”. This alteration of the Jews’ morality and character can only be credited to the dehumanization that they receive, not to the weakness of their spirit. The flock of hungry men clawing for food represents the selfish, animal-like, survival of the fittest mentality that replaces their normal human behavior. The Nazis purposely fail to provide the Jews with sufficient provisions, and as a result, the Jews are reduced to behave like beasts. The Jews, who once resolved that the only way to survive was to help one another, have since resolved that it is every-man-for-himself. Their wish to fulfill the needs that had been deprived from them is so strong, that they are even willing to go as far as to fight one another, to the death, for a small ration of bread. This selfish attitude of the Jews is even reflected by their young when their “sons abandoned their father’s remains without a tear.” (Pg. 87 old book) Rabbi Eliahou's son feels that his father is growing weak. Therefore, he believes that the end is near for his father and he wants to…
In the book Night, by Elie Wiesel, Hitler’s main goal was to make the Jews feel inhuman; he was very successful in this. The Jews were tortured everyday for no reason at all other than for the SS officers’ own amusement. The SS officers treated the men as if they were animals, making them fight for food. Women, babies, old, sick, and handicapped were put into the crematoriums as soon as they arrived at the camps. They killed people for no reason, with no remorse whatsoever. Torture, being treated like animals, and being burned alive or killed were all things that led to the Jews feeling as if they were not human.…