Q5: After I read this book, this made me understand how much the Jews has struggled in the camps. Before I read this book, I thought the concentration camps is where Jews had to work until there numbers on their arm would be called out to get killed. They would killed them only by using the gas chambers which that wasn't the case at all. A lot of Jews were killed by machine guns. Babies were used as target practices for shooting. Babies were also thrown into fires. People died from furnaces. I didn't know that the they used gas chambers and disguised them as showers. This also made me understand how Jews slowly lost their rights and privileges. This helped me understand how privileged I am today and I take things for grand it while back in …show more content…
He wasn't safe in the hospital because he could get killed in the hospital. Even the doctor said that he shouldn't be too comfortable or safe. The doctor was also a Jew. He could get his number called the next morning or later. That's scary to think that even in the hospital where it's the most safest place to think. Someone can get killed. Elie also said that it was nice to have bed sheets for one and he almost forgot that people sleep with bed sheets because he sleep in uncomfortable bunks and has to sleep next to people without sheets in the freezing cold air. Plus the only food they got didn't helped at all. The only thing they got was cold leftover soup, little amount of bread, and black coffee. That didn't help them to stay warm. It's sad to think even in a hospital a Elie had to worry about if he's going to be alive or not. That's the last place to think so one would get killed for their beliefs. Everyone should be the rights to be in the hospital if they needed no matter what's there race, gender, religion, etc. A hospital is a place to stay to feel safe and have doctors and nurses to take of that patient's needs. I wonder how did Elie feel after he left the hospital. Did he missed it? Does he want to come
My symbol was the block. I thought this represented the ghettos and living spaces in the camps. My first detail is that Elie stayed in a ghetto when he first got involved in the war. “Two ghettos were created in Sighet.” (Wiesel 11)
The way the officers treated the Jews made them feel like they weren't human anymore, and no better than inanimate objects. “You...you...you…” They pointed their fingers, the way one might choose cattle, or merchandise” (49). The officers acted as if the task of deciding who lived and who died was easy and required almost no thought. Again, the jewish people are not only compared to as dogs, but as merchandise.
“Every few yards, there stood an SS man, his machine gun trained on us. Hand in hand we followed the throng.” ( pg. 29) Eliezer's instinct for survival outweighs everything else. Although Eliezer and his family did not want to go to Auschwitz, they went because they were threatened if they did not comply. The SS guards would have killed anyone who did not follow orders, so they left their home and everything they have every known in order to survive.
The quote is important to Elie’s experiences because it shows the severity of what he had been through while inside of the wagon. Having One hundred men crammed inside a single cart and only twelve remaining is a significant difference. It’s important to his experiences because out of all those who died, he and his father managed to come out alive. However, since his father was so old Elie had to help him survive by putting him first and protecting him when others thought he was dead. This quote is important to the book as a whole because it shows how normalized death was for the Jewish people, it shows how disposable the Jews were to the Nazis.
1. “For nearly an hour, she remained...till Papa came home and played the accordion. Only then did she sit up and start to recover.” - Liesel finds comfort and safety in her foster father. She trusts him and is happy when around him; two important aspects of any relationship, especially a family relationship.
Throughout the horrific experiences in the concentration camp, Elie and his father had to learn to look out for each other even when it was everybody for themselves. Towards the end of Night, Elie, his father, and other prisoners were on a “death” march to another camp to avoid being liberated by the Russians. The march was extremley gruesome, mostly because everyone was in such poor physical shape. When they had been resting at a small town, Elie’s fatehr kept making sure Eile didn’ fall asleep… falling asleep would risk dying from exhaustion. After arriving at the new camp, Elie’s father fell ill with dysentary.
Prologue The Holocaust was a tragedy that happened in the 1940’s . It took around 11 million lives, 6 million of them being Jews. The victims of the Holocaust went through hell. They were starved, beat, and separated from their families.
From the beginning, Elie Wiesel 's work details the beginning of his adult life by focussing on his awareness of Judaism, its history, and its significance to the religion. Despite warnings about German intentions towards Jews, Eliezer’s family and the other Jews in the small town of Sighet, fail to escape the country when they have a chance. As a result, the Jewish population is sent to concentration camps all throughout Germany. Then, after being sent to a concentration camp, Eliezer is separated from his mother and younger sister, but remains with his father. The camp then pushing Eliezer and his father 's faith in the Jewish religion.
Discrimination against Jews “..when we were told we couldn't live in our house we had to move to a different part of Cracow, where the soldiers built a big wall and my mother and father and my brother and I all had to live in one room.” [Ch.12 p.128] Here, Shmuel recounts what happened to his family and him before moving to Auschwitz into a concentration camp. He stated that they were “told” they were unable to love in their home anymore but in one room instead; we are able to learn that they are not free and it's the beginning of their entrapment. “The train was horrible.. There were too many of us in the carriages for one thing.
Do you think literature helps the newer generations remember and honor those who died in the holocaust? Literary resources such as The Diary of Anne Frank, “Frank Family & WWII” and Nightfall give different perspectives from inside and outside the camps during the Holocaust. In the novel Night by Elie Wiesel, 2nd edition, 1955. This teaches us about how it was to go to the ghettos, deportation, and not one but 3 different camps, including the death marches and the last week of death and tranquility with no food.
The articles concept of the literary criticism of night is to give an opinion on how the book, Night was written. The overall viewpoint from the critics of the book was that it was not thoroughly written in complete detail nor did it show depth of the main character, but it was imaginative and an intriguing autobiography mixing facts with a little a bit of hallucination. Many of the authors compared Wiesel’s work to other famous authors and poets like Anne Frank and John Donne, saying that it focuses on the connections and experiences of the camp and how Elie went through a traumatizing time in his life that has changed him forever like Anne Frank did. In addition, the article explains why the novel is important in sharing the interpretation of the holocausts with many people since the novel is very popular. The authors all agree that Wiesel’s work and his technique in writing the autobiography was a big accomplishment stating that it is hard to turn graphic horrific events into a literary form and make it aesthetically pleasing to people who want to learn more about life during the holocaust.
He could not believe that God would put him in such a terrible position, watching dozens of people he used to be friends with get brutally beaten, starved and even watching them walk to the crematorium awaiting their certain death. After a while Elie
If Elie had lost all humanity, he would have had no reason to live and he could have moved where he was ordered and been shot just as easily. Instead, he chooses to move back to his barrack and try to last just a little bit longer; he knew the end had to be near and he was ready to get out of the hell that was
To find a man who has not experienced suffering is impossible; to have man without hardship is equally unfeasible. Such trials are a part of life and assert that one is alive by shaping one’s character. In the autobiographical memoir Night by Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, this molding is depicted through Elie’s transformation concerning his identity, faith, and perspective. As a young boy, Elie and his fellow neighbors of Sighet, Romania were sent to Auschwitz, a macabre concentration camp with the sole motive of torturing and killing Jews like himself. There, Elie experiences unimaginable suffering, and upon liberation a year later, leaves as a transformed person.
Chapter One Summary: In chapter one of Night by Elie Wiesel, the some of the characters of the story are introduced and the conflict begins. The main character is the author because this is an autobiographical novel. Eliezer was a Jew during Hitler’s reign in which Jews were persecuted. The book starts out with the author describing his faith.