The Holocaust is a vicious memory that survivors hold each and everyday. From the tattoos on their arms, to the memories that haunt them, living as a prisoner of the Holocaust was no easy feat. Both books, Night written by Elie Wiesel and Survival in Auschwitz by Primo Levi are memoirs written to show their readers the brutal experience and hardships they had to endure as prisoners of the Holocaust. In this paper, I will use Night by Elie Wiesel and Survival in Auschwitz by Primo Levi to compare and contrast the similarities and differences they both experienced while in concentration camps. The first event I will compare and contrast will be the event in which they are first exposed to Nazi’s and concentrations camps. The second event I will …show more content…
Both writers illustrate a picture of what they witnessed in order to help the audience see what they saw. For example, in Survival in Auschwitz, Levi writes that he sees how, “… the mothers stayed up to prepare for the food for the journey with tender care, and washed their children and packed their luggage …” (15). The diction Levi uses in that sentence as well as the preceding and following that sentence also show impeccable detail in the way Levi conveys what he saw. It shows how observant he was. Levi made each and every experience detailed to give the readers an insight into how bad the event was. Levi writes about the tender care the mother possessed even during such a horrific time; this elaborates on how Levi wanted his readers to really imagine in our minds what was going on. Similarly, Wiesel also pays very close attention to detail. He describes the head of camp by saying that, “he was a stocky man with big shoulders, the neck of a bull thick lips and curly hair.” (47). Wiesel’s choice of words help paints a picture of what Wiesel was seeing at the camp. He could have just said that the head of camp was a big man with curly hair; however, he goes into great detail to describe him in order for the readers to see what he saw. Although Wiesel and Levi had very different experiences and perspectives of concentration …show more content…
The first very big difference between Wiesel and Levi is age. Wiesel was first exposed to Nazi’s as a young boy who was twelve years old through Moishe the Beadle. Then a few years later, when he was fifteen, he is taken from his home to a concentration camp. Wiesel’s age is much different from Levi when taken to a concentration camp. Levi was twenty-four years old when he was taken to a concentration camp; that is almost a decade of age difference between the two. The age difference forced Wiesel and Levi to see and experience their first exposure to concentration camps and Nazi’s in differing perspectives. As a fifteen-year-old boy, Wiesel was taken to concentration camps without knowing the harsh reality of them and without knowing how difficult life as a Jew actually is during that time. In Night, Wiesel even goes on to say that, “… our first impressions of the German soldiers were rather reassuring … their attitude towards their hosts were distant but polite …” (9). In this chapter of the book, Wiesel still does not know who the German soldiers are what they are there to do. Although Wiesel and his hometown were previously told about the brutal German soldiers, Wiesel and many others did not believe him. They called him crazy and didn’t give much thought to Moishe the Beadle actually being right and foretelling what
Throughout his memoir, Night, author Elie Wiesel chronicles the brutality and inhumanity of the Jewish concentration camps during the Holocaust and recounts their brutal toll on the ethical awareness of the Jewish people. The novel’s protagonist,
In addition, through this memoir, Wiesel also provided us a true definition of what dehumanisation when Elie got separated from his family. Wiesel portrays the emotion that Elie was having when he and his father was separated from his mother "Yet that was the moment when I parted from my mother." Through the expression that Wiesel describe Elie we can see how cruelty and dehumanisation were the Germans to the Jewish people. They were making all the Jewish separated to many sections in the camp "Men to the left, women to the right." Wiesel also provided us the information that anything can happen in the camp to the Jewish people.
During the time of 1933-1945 the Nazi’s implemented a series of dehumanizing actions towards the jewish. In the book “Night” by Eliezer Wiesel, Wiesel discusses his life before being deported to a concentration camp, his experience in concentrations camps, and how he was finally liberated. Through Wiesel, we are able to witness the way these unfortunate jewish people were stripped of their rights, experimented on and objectified. First of all, there were many laws that were being established that were specifically targeting the Jewish population as time was progressing in Nazi Germany. These laws made a huge impact and made it more difficult for the jewish community to live as “normal” human beings.
The Holocaust is a destruction on a massive scale, it was significant part of today’s history because it teaches people how and where genocide can take place in. Although, the violence was targeted towards the Jewish people, non-Jewish people were also killed during this traumatizing event of world history. The memoir Night by Eliezer Wiesel tells the story about Elie’s Holocaust experiences. In his story, Elie experiences and encounters several relationships involving himself and other characters. The theme relationships are essential for physical and psychological survival are shown throughout the book when situations involving Mrs. Schächter, Stein, and Elie occur.
Night and Day In the great history of man, there is no event committed as gut-wrenchingly ignoble as the Holocaust. Therefore, conveying the devastation and emotional trauma on a believable and personal level is a sign of fantastic writing, which can be seen in Elie Wiesel’s Night. Moreover, to take this awful situation and put an almost light-hearted twist on it is also increasable, which is seen in the film “Life is Beautiful.” Accordingly, both of these mediums portray main characters that are in concentration camps, but present them in varying ways that create stories that feel completely different.
Although his early life was filled with nearly unimaginable hardships, Elie Wiesel went on to create a legacy of hope and inspiration millions of people all over the world will continue to look to, that is his long and accomplished life. Upon entering his adult life, Wiesel had to overcome devastating loss and the trauma inflicted on him during his time in Nazi concentration camps. After escaping these horrors though, Wiesel became known for his activism, and has become the voice of those who survived the Holocaust through his work on his world-renowned novel, Night. In listening to the powerful and true stories told in Wiesel’s unforgettable novel, Night, we know that the horrors he witnessed and experienced played an enormous role in the
Elie Wiesel Rhetorical Speech Analysis Elie Wiesel, a holocaust survivor and winner of a Nobel peace prize, stood up on April 12, 1999 at the White House to give his speech, “The Perils of Indifference”. In Wiesel’s speech he was addressing to the nation, the audience only consisted of President Clinton, Mrs. Clinton, congress, and other officials. The speech he gave was an eye-opener to the world in his perspective. Wiesel uses a variety of rhetorical strategies and devices to bring lots of emotion and to educate the indifference people have towards the holocaust. “You fight it.
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 1944 Wiesel and the rest of the Jews in Sighet are sent to Auschwitz the infamous Nazi death camp. Wiesel describes his time in Auschwitz by using nightmarish, gruesome, and horrific imagery. All this, in turn, helps make a personal connection with the reader. Elie Wiesel describes his unorthodox arrival at Auschwitz by using nightmarish
To begin with, Wiesel could not believe what was happening. He didn’t believe how cruel the Germans were. Wiesel was living a nightmare and couldn’t escape it. For instance, Wiesel stated, “I pinched myself; was I still alive? Was I awake?
The human condition is a very malleable idea that is constantly changing due to the current state of mankind. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, the concept of the human condition is displayed in the worst sense of the concept, during the Holocaust of WWII. During this time, multiple groups of people, most notably European Jews, were persecuted against and sent to horrible hard labor and killing centers such as Auschwitz. In this memoir, Wiesel uses complex figurative language such as similes and metaphors to display the theme that a person’s state as a human, both at a physical and emotional level, can be altered to extreme lengths, and even taken away from them, under the most extreme conditions.
In this essay you will here from sources such as Night by Elie Wiesel, “There is No News from Auschwitz” by A.M. Rosenthal, and “An Evening with Elie Wiesel” as transcribed by Trisha Nord. The train to take the Wiesel family away was coming the very next day,
In a span of 10 years, the Holocaust killed over 7 million people, that’s just as much as the population of Hong Kong. In the book Night, by Elie Wiesel, Wiesel shares his experience on how he survived the Holocaust and what he went through. How he dealt with the horrors and even to how he felt of his dad’s death and how he saw himself after it was all over. As he tried to publish it he was constantly turned down due to the fact of how horrid and truful it was. He still tried and tried until it was finally published.
Wiesel addresses not only his own situation, but also the effect survival had inwards other fathers and sons in the camp. The memoir
Memory Blessing or Curse Religious wars fought over beliefs were always fought between two sides and one is thought to have a winner and a loser victor and victim. In Elie Wiesel’s Noble speech “Hope, Despair, and Memory” he describes his experiences during a religious war that were more of an overpowering of people than a war no clash of metal, no hard fought fight, just the rounding up and killing of people with different beliefs that barely put up a fight. Elie Wiesel the author of the Noble lecture “Hope, Despair, and Memory” implores us to respond to the human suffering and injustice that happened in the concentration camps by remembering the past, so that the past cannot taint the future through his point of view, cultural experiences, as well as his use of rhetorical appeals. Wiesel uses his cultural experiences and point of view sot that he could prove he spent time and survived the concentration camps in order to communicate that the past must be remembered that way it cannot destroy the future, he spent time in a concentration camps and he