The Holocaust was a horrible time in the 1940s. Hitler the leader of the Nazi’s had an idea of just having the perfect people which was having blonde hair and blue eyes. Hitler's plan was to kill the people who didn’t have these appearances. Hitler would do this by creating concentration camps that would torture, kill people in many ways which for example burning, starving them to death. In the book Night a book Elie Wiesel a Holocaust survivor wrote, talks how Elie survived those terrible times. How the Nazi treated Jews, what it was like in the camps, what the Jews had to go through to be able to survive. Elie Wiesel and the other prisoners weren't treated like humans when they were being killed like cattle in the slaughterhouse, when they …show more content…
This shows that the Germans had no respect for the Jews. It also shows that they thought nothing of them. The Germans compared the Jews to being like dogs or animals.
The next example of dehumanization is when Elie and his father were in line waiting to be ordered where to go. An inmate says, “ ‘We can't let them kill us like that, like cattle in the slaughterhouse ‘ “(31). Being killed like cattle isn't human. Being thrown into the crematoria alive, being burned and turned into ashes isn't human. The Jews are being treated like animals, making them feel worthless.
It was May, after a hot shower when the prisoners experience dehumanization, when they were told to run, “Around midnight, we were told to run ‘Faster!’ Yelled our guards. “ ‘ The faster you run, the faster you'll go to sleep ‘ ”(41).This dehumanized them because the Germans made the Jews run in the cold night with no clothes on, even though it was cold the guards made the Jews work for the clothes they had wear and for the bunks they had to sleep
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From then on, I had no other name” (42).This shows the dehumanization of Elie because now he is referred to a number rather than himself. No one now will ever know him by name Eliezer but for a number for the next couple of years he spends in the concentration camps. Another example of dehumanization is when Elie and his father were transported to the camp Buna. All of the prisoners who arrived at Buna were having medical checkups. Kapos appeared and began choosing men they liked, “They pointed their fingers, the way one might choose cattle or merchandise” (49). This dehumanized the Jews they were being treated like animals. It made the Jews feel like animals, worthless, they were being discriminated.
During the couple of years when Elie and other prisoners were in concentration camps they were being dehumanized. Elie and the other prisoners were being treated like animals, being referred as numbers, they were being killed like animals. In the world today in many places there's so many dehumanization happening, people being treated like animals,being treated very
In Elie Wiesel's book, “Night,” the Nazis assigned the inmates separate numbers to tell them apart. Assigning numbers was an attempt to make the inmates feel less human, and for the most part, it did. Altho ugh assigning numbers worked for most Jews, it failed for Elie because he continued to speak to others on a personal level, and whenever he wrote the book, his thoughts were positive and lively. When confronted by other inmates, Elie spoke to them kindly and thoughtfully, which means he did not let the assigned number affect him. One way the Nazis failed to take Elies' humanity was because he was aware that he was equal to others and not above them.
They were tortured and murdered even children. His book Night Elie Wiesel explore several themes of the Holocaust including dehumanization loss of Rights and lots of Hope. The Jews have lost their rights by having to give up their things to being told how to live their lives and even losing themselves. The Jews had to hand over all their valuables to the authorities.
Jews, along with other captors were tortured because of Hitler's hatred. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, the author is a survivor of the events that happened at Auschwitz Elie was mentally and physically tortured and endured great suffering imagine becoming separated from your mother and young sibling and watching your father endure the same mental and physical abuse including watching your father lying on his death bed unable to have an impact on his health. Feeling like he would die from malnourishment and starvation, to not die Elie would trade rations for a doctor’s care for his father and himself, Elie was forced into hard labor and beaten when his work effort was not sufficient. The hope in life he once had was diminished because of another man's indifference Elie Wiesel wrote Night to create awareness of history during world war 2 and effort on his part to share a story about real-life events that took place among the Jewish population and the suffrage they endured a memory never to be forgotten he educated, any readers of these events during the holocaust so people remember the time in history taught us that life is not always fair kind equal but take our history to make out current lives better through making healthy decisions to impact the world we live
Throughout Night, dehumanization consistently took place as the tyrant Nazis oppressed the Jewish citizens. The Nazis targeted the Jews' humanity, and slowly dissolved their feeling of being human. The feeling of dehumanization was very common between the jews. They were constantly being treated as in they were animals. The author and narrator Elie Wiesel, personally experienced being treated like an animal
In the book, Night, Dehumanization majorly affects the Jews. Dehumanization is the process by which the Nazis gradually reduced the Jews to little more than things. It makes the Jews want to give up. There are many examples of dehumanization, including beating, selection, and robbery. Eliezer was whipped in front of everyone during roll call, “…I shall therefore try to make him understand clearly once and for all…I no longer felt anything except the lashes of the whip.
Out of the three ways Jews were dehumanized, mental was the worst and Eliezer was most affected by mental
In Night. People in concentration camps tried to protect each other but struggled very hard to do so. Sometimes, they barely had a chance to begin with. For example, Elie witnessed someone kill himself because they already committed all he had left to taking care of a family member and was stuck. “A terrible thought crossed my mind: What if he had wanted to be rid of his father?
At Auschwitz, it changes Elie 's mind and has a dramatic effect on him. "How could they burn the children?" (Night, 56). The Germans murdered many innocent and defenseless Jews for no reason.
This played a large role in the dehumanization role because by taking away the beliefs of the Jews, which is a big part of their identity, they were reduced to shells of the people they
For starters, when Eliezer and the other prisoners got to Auschwitz they were forced to get a tattoo of numbers, the only name the Nazi’s will call him. Miserably the Jews filed past a table, “I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name” (Wiesel 42). This shows the dehumanization of Eliezer because now he is referred to as a number rather than a human being with a name. Another example of dehumanization occurs in the beginning when they were crammed into cattle cars.
The cruelty of the German officers at the concentration camps change Elie’s personality throughout the novel. At the beginning of the novel, Elie is deeply religious and spends most of his time studying Judaism. However, by the end of the novel, Elie believes that God has been unjust to him and all the other Jews, and has lost most of his faith. The cruelty of the German officers also changed the other Jews as well. The events of the Holocaust forces the prisoners to fend for themselves, and not help others.
“A traumatic experience robs you of your identity” (Dr.Bill). Concentration camps during the agonizing Holocaust disallowed their prisoners to obtain a personal identity. The renowned memoir, Night, written by Holocaust survivor, Eliezer Wiesel, published in 1954 expands the apprehension of the life altering challenges and torment the Jewish society encountered from 1933 to 1945. Identity consists of an individual's distinctive characteristics, beliefs and mannerisms which was forbidden for the Jewish hostages of the Holocaust to attain. Elie’s identity was shaped and reshaped by the traumatic experiences the Jewish community persevered through.
The public beatings, the hanging of prisoners and making others walk past them, as well as the selection process are all examples of dehumanization. When Eliezer has to run at full speed to avoid being noticed during one of the selection processes, it is a reminder as to how large a role dehumanization
Wiesel is the author of the memoir Night, which mainly focuses on how Hitler’s power and hatred towards Jews make Eliezer and his family’s life miserable. Eliezer is only a teenager when he and his family are forced to leave their home, and they’re sent to various concentration camps where Eliezer has to fight hunger, diseases, and has to take care of his father. Going through various camps has a negative impact on Eliezer 's life, therefore at the end of the book, Eliezer’s father begins to experience Eliezer’s abnormal behavior towards him. In this memoir, Eliezer, his family, and millions of other Jews experience different types of dehumanization in the concentration camps during the World War II.
The Nazi officers wanted the Jewish men to march like they were animals, and to not stop until they deemed fit. The Jewish were also marching in freezing weather, and had no food or drink while they were marching. They were expected to be like machines, and if they failed as machines, they were simply finished off by the SS. Elie described, “When the SS were tired, they were replaced. But no one replaced us.