Gage
Amid the midst of the Holocaust, millions of Jews, Gypsies, Handicapped, and Homosexuals went through extermination and among all the victims Elie Wiesel lived to tell his story. Elie Wiesel wrote this story so something like this would never occurred again. In “Night” Elie Wiesel and his family witnessed and experienced the horrific treatment and genocide of Jews which led to them becoming practically emotionless and abnormal.
Throughout “Night”, Elie Wiesel described in deep detail the everyday routine at the camp. The first barracks had a floor and a few skylights on the floor and for the next barracks they arrived to “There was no floor. A roof and four walls. Our feet sank in the mud.” Where they figured out where they would work
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They killed babies and most women right away by throwing them in the furnace;This was the same for older men and women. When they ordered the prisoners to run there would be officers with batons and whips hitting people passing by. It got to the point where it was not painful after a few hits. Elie Wiesel said that “Around five o’clock in the morning, we were expelled from the barrack. The kapos began to beat us again, but I no longer felt the pain.” which shows that they were being beaten the Jews everyday, every chance they would get. The punishments were cruel as well. In “Night”, “An ordinary inmate does not have the right to mix into other people’s affairs. One of you does not seem to have understood this point. I shall therefore try to make him understand clearly, once and for all.” and for that Elie Wiesel was whipped 25 times for catching his boss having sex with one of the female prisoners. A prisoner was shot for trying eat some soup on the ground. With that in mind, Hitler used this tactic to pry the self-confidence and emotion out of the prisoners ultimately dehumanizing the Jews. By the first few days in the concentration camp, Elie’s father already had a blank face and showed no emotion towards anything. And obviously you can tell it was a
Have you ever wondered what it is like to be in a concentration camp,or what it is like to be a Jew while Hitler is starting to take control over you and your family? Hitler's number one thing that he wanted to do was kill all Jews. In the book Night, Nazis gradually reduced the Jews to nothing more than things because they hated all Jews. In Night, the author Elie Wiesel tells about his experiences in a concentration camp. Many of the experiences Elie shared with the readers of this book explains how the Nazis dehumanized his father, his fellow Jews and himself.
“Night” is a powerful Memoir with 178 pages and was published by New York, NY: Hill and Wang, a division of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Written by Elie Wiesel and published in 1956, this autobiography is about Elie’s experience with his father in the Nazi Germany concentration camps in 1944-1945 during the Holocaust. I believe the author’s purpose in writing this memoir was to write about the cruelty of the Nazi soldiers in the concentration camps and to be a voice for the Jews, specifically his family. He wanted to be the “messenger of the dead among the living”.
Writing About The Memoir Night Elie Wiesel In “Night,” written by Elie Wiesel, he shares the unbearable history of surviving the Holocaust along with his father and millions of people from Jewish communities. Elie walks us through some of his experiences in the Auschwitz concentration camps. He also talks with people about some of the hardest conquests he has faced and lived with during these times that the Nazi soldiers have held many people captive.
Human rights are rights that all human beings are equally entitled to - no matter what race, religion, sex, language, or other status. Some rights include, freedom from slavery and torture or the right to life and liberty. However, these rights can be violated in a multitude of ways. For instance, millions of people's rights were disregarded during the Holocaust. Fortunately, Elie Wiesel was one of very few people who survived the terrorizing reign of Adolf Hitler.
Elie Wiesel witnessed hundreds of deaths right before his eyes. The terrible event that was called the holocaust was ran by Adolf Hitler and his Nazi party, in Germany and Eastern Europe in 1933 through 1945. All Jews and disabled people were burned, shot, hung and also drowned to death. Many were also sent to the "showers" were they would gas all the innocent people. The poems "To The Little Polish Boy Standing with his arms up" (By Peter Fischl) and Ellie Wiesels "Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech" and the poem "
Elie Wiesel has experienced unthinkable atrocities throughout his lifetime. These atrocities have shaped him into a very different person than he was in his younger years. When he was young, he was really religious and had a happy family. He lived with his parents and sisters. Because of the Nazis, he lost his family, he lost his faith in Auschwitz, he felt hopeless.
In Night one of the ways that the Jews were dehumanized was by abuse. There were beatings, “I never felt anything except the lashes of the whip... Only the first really hurt.” (Wiesel, 57) “They were forced to dig huge trenches. When they had finished their work, the men from the Gestapo began theirs.
Night by Elie Wiesel describes how Jews were treated in the concentration camps during World War II. During this time Wiesel witnessed many horrific acts. Two of these were executions. Though the processes of the executions were similar, the condemned and Jews’ reactions to the executions were different.
In the novel, “Night” Elie Wiesel communicates with the readers his thoughts and experiences during the Holocaust. Wiesel describes his fight for survival and journey questioning god’s justice, wanting an answer to why he would allow all these deaths to occur. His first time subjected into the concentration camp he felt fear, and was warned about the chimneys where the bodies were burned and turned into ashes. Despite being warned by an inmate about Auschwitz he stayed optimistic telling himself a human can’t possibly be that cruel to another human.
In chapters 4 to 6 in the novel, “Night”, Elie Wiesel and his father continue to suffer in the grasp of the Germans. Eventually, all the Jews are moved to a new work camp, Buna, where they are overworked and undernourished, and resort to killing each other for pieces of bread. In his old home, Elie had never experienced brutality and inhumanity within it. Now, Elie and other Jews witness extreme violence and an absence of mercy that begins to erode their mental state; bringing most men to animalistic tendencies. In chapter 4, the Jews arrive in Buna.
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Eliezer Wiesel narrates the legendary tale of what happened to him and his father during the Holocaust. In the introduction, Wiesel talks about how his village in Seghet was never worried about the war until it was too late. Wiesel’s village received advanced notice of the Germans, but the whole village ignored it. Throughout the entire account, Wiesel has many traits that are key to his survival in the concertation camps.
In this memoir of Elie Wiesel’s Night, it shows many ways how Jews did not get the rights that they deserve. During this time period, the First Article was already violated. It states that everyone is born free and equal, and they should act as everyone is their brother and sister. As Elie describes an officer, it shows how Nazi followers felt towards people in concentration camps.
Elie Wiesel was truly a courageous figure during the torturous years of the Holocaust. In his best selling novel titled Night, Elie portrays many events that completely shatter most human rights laws established by modern day activists such as the United Nations. According to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, there are thirty different articles established to protect us from people violating our treasured human rights. Within the declaration, two articles really stand out for Elie’s situation such as article five and eighteen. Both of these articles accurately despic great human rights violations that were performed throughout Elie’s experience during the mournful Holocaust.
I learned a lot of new information while reading Night, there were many things I didn’t know about the Holocaust before that I know about now. I never knew much about the conditions of the camps or how the people were treated there, I just knew that they were dreadful places. Now I can have an image of the camps in my head, what it looked like for the people who had to live in these horrendous camps. They committed so many execrable acts on people, they performed experiments on people, murdered whoever they wanted, starved people and many more gruesome things. I didn’t realize how bad the conditions really were and how badly the people were treated.