The author shows how terrifying it was to be in the camps but also how faith can help you get through those tough times. Religion and faith can shape a person's form in different ways either a good or bad way. The book shows how these camps can use a person's humanity, and How it can affect their religion. Eliezer and his family got captured and taken to camps, while some died and others were injured. Eliezer had to use his faith in god to know they would come out alive even if he had second thoughts.
Eliezer was born in Romania, His family along with other Jews got deported to the German concentration camp. Eliezer had faith threw god, he remained faithful to him while he was in the camps. Some people use faith to strengthen them because they feel gods presence and feel at peace. If you have strong faith, it will give you more confidence in the times you struggle and help you lift that burden off of yourself. In the beginning, Eliezer used the gods' peace and presence to protect them when they arrived at the camps. Eliezer even made a Thanksgiving prayer after arriving early at Auschwitz camp.
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Culture can help others better understand themselves and what kind of people they are or want to be. Some people have stronger cultures than others, Eliezer was a Romanian-born Jew. Faith can give you a concept of dignity and worth. Faith can be a strong aspect of people's lives, Eliezer used his faith in god to protect him. Then there was the part where Eliezer was questioning his faith. Even after the holocaust and after the camps he still questioned his faith in
In this essay I am going to show evidence that he lost his faith, not only in his God, but in his leaders and his father. Elie lost faith in his leaders. The cruel actions the Nazis performed in the concentration camps says plenty about why. But when Elie's leg was still recovering in the infirmary, his neighbor said this, “ I have more faith in Hitler than anyone else. He alone has
” During his experience in the concentration camp Elie Wiesel loses faith in his fellow man and in God. He shows this through his thoughts and his actions. Elie Wiesel loses faith in man through the actions of the Nazis and when he first arrived at Auschwitz. Elie and his father both were told
Due to the amount of trauma, pain and anger the camp provided for Eliezer, it has been concluded that his faith for God reduces a significant amount throughout the camp. Prior to Eliezer's arrival to Auschwitz he was able to accompany his
Faith is very important in order to keep hope alive during the Holocaust. In Night, Elie has a lot of faith in God. Before being sent to the concentration camps, he fully trusted in God and took comfort in knowing He was there. When Elie and his family first arrived at the
For example, when Eliezer arrives at Auschwitz concentration camp he still finds
Another time when faith impacted Elie and his expiriences is when he believed that Akiba Drumer should have remained faithful. Elie writes, “...if only he could have kept his faith in God.” (Wiesel 77) This quote demonstrates that Elie's faith is influential as others lose faith, while he maintains his
Eliezer’s faith in god is lost. He struggles both physically and mentally for life as he loses his faith in god. Eliezer worked strenuously to save himself and asks god many times to guide him and free him from his suffering. These conditions gave people the confidence, and the courage to live yet took away everything else they ever loved or believed in. Eliezer Wiesel loses his faith in God through through what he experiences in the Nazi concentration camp.
Wiesel’s Diminishing Jewish Faith Throughout Night In Elie Wiesel's Night, Wiesel describes his and his father's experiences in the concentration camps and how this affected his relationship with God. Wiesel explainses the psychological degradation that the situation had on him. Not only was he abused, but he was also worried that he would be the next one to go. Before the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel was a 15-year-old boy who lived with his mother, father, and sister.
He is deeply religious and believes in God's power and love. However, as he is forced to witness the atrocities of the Holocaust, his faith is tested in profound ways. He is confronted with the brutal reality of evil and suffering, and he begins to question how a loving God could allow such atrocities to occur. This struggle is particularly evident when he witnesses the hanging of a young boy and wonders how God could allow such a thing to happen. This experience shakes his faith to its core and marks the beginning of his struggle with faith.
To illustrate his religious devotion Eliezer says “by day I studied Talmud and by night I would run to the synagogue …” (3). This shows that Eliezer is very religious this is clear because he studies Jewish law all day. According to the text Eliezer says “Why did I pray? Strange question. Why did I live?
But eliezer has been taught that god is the only way that god is always watching you, that god is what created the very existence of this world that without god there would be nothing,because of this he has to believe what they teach the him from a small age because if not god will know, god will only bring pureness to those who believe in him .However his belief in this purity of god tends to get shaken by the evilness of the holocaust,the reader must understand that eliezer is just a young little boy he is innocent he does not understand,by watching what they do in these concentration camps he has to witness cruelty and pain but how in the world could this reflect god's divinity?Even so after the questioning and all that eliezer still believes in god because he comes to realize that in some of his experiences miracles have saved him, he asks a man named moshe “why do you pray?” and the man replies “I
The adversities at Auschwitz and Buchenwald caused Elie to lose faith in God. Before being transported into Auschwitz, Elie was a boy who deeply believed in God and had absolute faith in God. Elie 's first seeds of doubt in God came when he was transported into the camp and separated from his mother and sister. The other prisoners began reciting the Kaddish, but Elie got agitated when they gave thanks to God, “For the first time, I felt anger rising within me.
Belief and Faith is a “double-edged sword” to the jews, it cuts both ways. It keeps them alive, and at the same time makes them oblivious, and leads to their suffering. Over time, Elie’s belief in god, diminishes and eventually he questions God’s existence extensively and at point, Elie is infuriated that even though they are being tormented and enslaved, the Jews will still pray to god, and thank him, “If god did exist, why would he let u go through all the pain and suffering (33). This is a major point in the ongoing theme of faith and belief, because for once he is infuriated with the thought of religion in a time of suffering. Throughout the book, with the nazis ultimate goal is to break the jews and make dehumanize them and if anything, their goal is take and diminish their belief.
Eliezer was very close to god and wanted to learn anything he could. Once he was taken away from his home, he began losing faith in god and lost all hope. Eliezer stopped praying and he believed that god was unjust. Eliezer felt as though god was uncaring and so he stopped believing in him. His view on god changed juristically throughout Night.
Some of these survivors never believed in their religion after their experiences. However, for others, it took time for them to retrieve the passionate faith that they once had. In the duration of their time spent at the concentration camps, almost all of the victims questioned