Sydney J. Harris once said, “The three hardest tasks in the world are neither physical feats nor intellectual achievements, but moral acts : to return love for hate, to include the excluded, and to say ‘I was wrong.” But how do people learn what is wrong or right, what is unjust, and what is morally acceptable? Life experiences of injustice give us a feeling that something is just not right, but it takes a truly powerful story or person to truly persuade a person what injustice truly means. In Sounder by William H. Armstrong, when the Boy’s father is arrested he learns that even though people are good at heart it does not mean they are not subjected to racial prejudice and harsh laws and punishments. Elie Wiesel writes of his first hand experiences …show more content…
Loss damages humans emotionally and sometimes spiritually but it is loss that makes us grow as members of a society. The need to prevent others from suffering as well overwhelms us and we become advocated against whatever has hurt us so much. In Elie Wiesel’s autobiographical novel Night, he suffers along with his family through the Holocaust. He watches people suffer and wither away, including his father. During his time of just under a year in concentration camps, Wiesel grew into a very mature and emotionally strong person. His entire family passed away during this time. However, he had grown so much through this that he chose to spend the rest of his life fighting to prevent another Holocaust like event from occurring. He gave speeches, wrote essays and novels, and became one of the most well known advocates for human rights. He provided many educational tools for us to use to teach the next generation about the monstrosities that he lived though. Elie Wiesel used his personal pain and loss to grow as a person and dedicate his life to ensuring that others don’t suffer as …show more content…
Scout, the main character grows spiritually, physically, and most importantly morally. She experiences the injustices of Southern racial policy and does not understand how to react to it. However, her behavior at the end of the story demonstrates her outstanding and extensive moral growth. In the beginning Scout shows immaturity by fighting and yelling at other. She shows her new maturity when she walks Arthur (Boo) Radley home after he rescues her and Jem from Bob Ewell. She said that to tell that Boo killed Bob Ewell would be like “shootin’ a mockingbird” or harming the innocent. Scout provided justice to a man who had shown her great kindness throughout her years, something neither of them would ever forget. When one sees injustices occurring outside their own front door it leads to feeling of responsibility for bringing new justice into society. Scout will likely spend much of her life fighting for the equal treatment of African Americans in our criminal justice system because of the events she witnessed as a child. Just like Scout, the moral growth experienced by witnessing injustices leads to a very mature and respectful person, willing to fight for what they believe is
Throughout the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Eliezer, the protagonist, is transported and moved to numerous concentration camps. His story, which is corresponding to Wiesel’s biography, is representative to the lives of a billion other Jews. Jews were stripped away from their families, beliefs, identity, and freedom. They could no longer express their faith in God or have the human right to live where desired. During the holocaust, nothing was fair, everything was dark and cruel.
Empathy is the intellectual identification with or vicarious experiencing of the feelings, thoughts, or attitudes of another. In English class this year, we’ve learned about the Holocaust and how the Jews were affected. Reading the book Night, by Elie Wiesel showed us a close up to lives of the Jews and more specifically his life. We talked about the bystander effect and not doing something is the worst thing you can do. An example could be the story we read on Kitty Genovese, who was killed while like almost thirty watched.
Silence towards injustice, is perhaps the most ignorant way to prevent dehumanization from repeating again. In the story Night, this action is repeated without thought or question and has resulted in pain and agony. To prevent this, humanity must be able to protect itself before protecting others, otherwise there is no point in continuing a pointless battle without any motivation. In the documentation of Elie Wiesel, a clear description of Elie Wiesel’s beliefs is that once a witnesses has seen a key event in a crime or timeline, that they have full obligation to come forward and admit they have seen that right in front of the authorities.
Although he slowly gave faith away, one reason would be to discourage Wiesel by injustice. For example, Violence, to kill, disadvantage, to anger, would impact the Jews with misery. In Night, the book Elie Wiesel wrote, he admits,”Whenever I dreamed of a better world, I could only imagine a universe with no bells”(69-70). Anyone can dream dearly about the true, genuine contentment in their hearts, but one must face reality when conditions get vigorous.
“In the end, we remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” – Martin Luther King Jr. During the Holocaust, the Jews felt helpless. People either hated them or felt sympathy for them.
“I remember, May 1944: I was 15-and-a-half, and I was thrown into a haunted universe where the story of the human adventure seemed to swing irrevocably between horror and malediction” Elie Wiesel. Millions of innocent people were taken captive by the Germans during World War two. They suffered terrible cruelties at the hands of German soldiers and many of the survivors have gone on to tell of the atrocities they faced. Elie Wiesel, one of the many survivors of the holocaust, retells his story in his novel, Night. In his novel, Wiesel reveals how atrocities and cruel treatment can turn innocent people into brutes.
Imagine you were living at the time of the holocaust and you were selected to be killed whether by your age, gender, or beliefs. Well, this actually happened to a survivor who gone through a difficult life. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel quoted, “A young Jewish boy discovered the kingdom of Night. I remember his bewilderment, I remember his anguish. It all happened so fast.
Night is just one of many memories written by Elie Wiesel. Who survived the Holocaust. In Night he narrates the experience of the deaths of his family members, the death of his adolescence and the death in his naive belief in man’s innate goodness. The power of the genre of the memoir is that it captures experience and insists that forgetting about such crimes against humanity is not an option, neither for Wiesel no for the reader. A key point is Dehumanization, dehumanization is to deprive human qualities.
The Holocaust was a cruel and terrifying time, especially for the groups targeted. Before it began, the Wiesels had been a deeply religious Jewish family. Elie Wiesel was only a teenager when he and his family were torn from their home and sent to concentration camps. There, he faced many horrors including the deaths of his family and the distortion of the person he once was. Wiesel has recounted these horrific events in his memoir, Night.
From the small town of Sighet in Transylvania to the huge concentration camps of Auschwitz. Elie Wiesel, the author and victim of the book Night, the horrifying experience of the Holocaust. Wiesel is a 15 year old Jewish boy who was captured by the Germans or “Nazis” during WWII. He went through an overwhelming amount of trauma, like when he got separated from his mother and sisters and watching his father suffer an unbearable amount of pain that eventually killed him. The fact is, power is a tool that can corrupt itself and others, it can ruin people’s lives and it can do that without people even realizing it.
Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night tells the personal tale of his account of the inhumanity and brutality the Nazis showed during the Holocaust. Night depicts the story of a young Jew from the small town of Sighet named Eliezer. Wiesel and his family are deported to the concentration camp known as Auschwitz. He must learn to survive with his father’s help until he finds liberation from the horror of the camp. This memoir, however, hides a greater lesson that can only be revealed through careful analyzation.
The Holocaust was one of the most tragic events in history. It just so happened to be the cause of six million deaths. While there are countless beings who experienced such trauma, it is impossible to hear everyone's side of the story. However, one man, in particular, allowed himself to speak of the tragedies. Elie Wiesel addressed the transformation he underwent during the Holocaust in his memoir, Night.
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.
After going through so much, many people do not have the same mindset as they did before. Being tortured and watching others being tortured changes a person’s life, especially Elie’s, his father’s, Moshe the Beadle’s, and Rabbi Eliahou’s. Elie Wiesel, the author of Night, shares his own experience of going through a concentration camp, and it is clear that many things in his life changed
Imagine knowing your fate ahead of time. That single moment would be stuck in your head, replayed every second to prevent it. This would obstruct your feeling of morals, making you only focus on your own survival. Nothing would get in your way of trying to survive. During the Holocaust, many people were faced with this moment when they stepped in a concentration camp.