Over time the bond the one shares with a loved one can undergo many tribulations that can reveal the extents of its love. It is a relationship that can withstand so much - especially between a young Jewish boy and his father during the Holocaust - in which Elie Weitzel portrays in his novel "Night”. Prior to being placed in Auschwitz, 15-year-old Elie and his father did not have a close relationship. Since Elie often spending his time studying the Tanakh and his father often tended to community matters, both had little connection with each other. However, once they both placed within a Nazi death camp, the two become inseparable.Nevertheless, throughout the novel, the bond formed as father and son that begins as a necessity for comfort slowly becomes a burden as …show more content…
Thus causing Elie to be determined to keep his father by his side at all costs. This is shown once the women and men were separated and Elie is only left with his father, the first thing he thinks as, “ [His] hand Palomino 2 shifted on [his] father’s arm. [He] had one thought - not to lose him. Not to be left alone” (Wiesel 37). Physically holding onto his father for a sense of security demonstrates the formation of a strong bond that didn't exist prior to entering the camp. Elie is depending on his father to keep him safe from an unfamiliar place that evokes the only piece of familiarity he has- his father. (transition) “I took a half a step forward. I wanted to see first where they were sending my father. If he went to the right, I would go after him” (Wiesel
They were running to Gleiwitz and Elie was thinking of his dad and thinking that the only reason why he was still running was because of his dad so that is why he was still running. “My father’s
Elies time with his father In the book Night there's one family where the boys and girl got split up and that’s what happened to a little boy name Elie and he had a strong relationship with his father. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel the author makes different senses about Elie and his father talking and helping each other but now read on and see about the relationships in the holocaust. First thing that he said is “ My hand tightened it’s grip on my father all I could think was not to lose him. Not to remain alone’’(30).
Shlomo “When they withdrew, next to me were two corpses, side by side, the father and the son. I was only fifteen years old.” A jewish boy try to help his father survive the “Night”. The analyzation between father and son in the story “Night” is Elie and his father, and meir and his father have contrasting actions towards their fathers such the way they cared for their fathers and the way they felt about their father during their imprisonment.
Situations are so awful within the concentration camp that he prefers the simplest foods, bread and soup, over his father. Each book has very unique father-son relationships, but similarities can still peek through. The father-son relationship is likewise comparable between the two books. They each start out in bad relationships with their fathers. Hiram’s relationship with his father starts out
In the book Night, we the readers witness the hardships and struggles in Elie’s life during the traumatic holocaust. The events that take place in this story are unbearable and are thought to be demented in modern times. In the beginning Elie is shown as a normal teenage Jewish boy, but the events are so drastic that we the readers forget how he was like in the beginning. Changes were made to Elie during the book, whether they were minor or major. The changes generated from himself, the journey, and other people.
The novel Night by Elie Wiesel is about a father and a son that have a bond strong enough to overcome the hardships of the holocaust. Even if almost nothing is done, a person's very presence could influence another's state of mind. In Night Elie's father broke down and struggled to give him any support, but he took care of Elie all throughout his life and tried his best while he still had some strength. Wanting to give back to his father, Elie decided to support his father whenever he was in need of help. This newfound purpose and their father-son bond helped make his father the biggest influence in his survival.
When they first arrived at Auschwitz Elie and his father looked to each other for support and survival, Sometimes Elie’s father being the only thing keeping him alive. In their old community Elie’s father was a strong-willed and respected community leader, as the book went on you could see how the roles were becoming reversed he was becoming weaker and more reliant on Elie to take care of him. Their father son bond had always been strong and only grew stronger with the things they had to endure. “My God, Lord of the Universe, give me strength never to do what Rabbi Eliahou’s son has done” Elie was disgusted when he saw Rabbi Eliahou’s son abandon his father to help improve his chances of his survival he prayed he’d never do such a thing, but as his father becoming progressively more reliant on Elie he started to see his father as more of a burden than anything else.
In the book, Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie’s relationship with his father is distant, but as the story progresses the relationship grows, eventually degenerating, but resolving in peace. In the beginning of the book Elie’s relationship with his father is distant. They don’t speak to each other that often, his father cares about the community more than his family, he didn’t leave when they had the chance, and lastly he never wanted to study the cabbala with Elie because he’s too young. Elie’s father is more concerned about the community than his own family.
Elie’s relationship with his dad over the course of the story changed drastically. The quote, “My father was running left to right exhausted, consoling friends,” (pg 15) shows the reader that Elie 's father tried to keep everyone calm, which means he always did the same for Elie. That shows they had a strong relationship at the start of the story. Accordingly, the quote, “Father! Father!
Near the beginning of the novel, Elie wanted to be in the same camp with his father more than anything else. The work given to both his father and himself was bearable, but as time passed by, “. . . his father was getting weaker” (107). The weaker Elie’s father got, the more sacrifices Elie made. After realizing the many treatments Elie was giving his father compared to himself, each additional sacrifice made Elie feel as if his “. . .
Elie 's inaction or inability to help his father and his guilt for not doing so helped Elie to shape the person he has become now is because he kept on realizing his stand on the situation on the harsh behavior towards his father. As he starts to live more with his father he became started to realize how important he was to him and how important he is for him. In the book Night, Chapter 7, when Elie and his after were on the cattle car he said"My father had huddled near me, draped in his blanket, shoulders laden with snow. And what if he were dead as well? I called out to him.
Many examples of father-son relationships are shown throughout the book. Each example plays a crucial role in how the tale unfolds. Night shows a variety of father-son relationships, but only the relationship between Wiesel and his father was stable and ended on good terms. An example of one of the father-son relationships that were unstable and ended poorly was Rabbi Eliahou and his son.
This relationship was very much like Rabbi Eliahou and his son’s. The man had taken some bread and he had brought some to share with his son Meir. Meir killed his own father to get the bread, then he was also killed over the bread. Both this relationship and Rabbi Eliahou and his son’s were similar. Both relationships had loyal fathers, and those fathers were betrayed by their sons in the times of extreme hardship.
The Holocaust was a horrific event, allowing millions of Jews to die or suffer. The tragic event separated families, not being able to see them ever again. However, in the memoir Night, Elie Wiesel and his father relied on each other and as a result, develops a strong father-son relationship. Wiesel and his father develop a strong father-son relationship throughout Night, experiencing horrific events during the Holocaust. Wiesel's relationship with his father progresses from a codependent relationship to a relationship where Wiesel believes his father is decreasing Wiesel's rate of survival.
“I realized that he did not want to see what they were going to do to me. He did not want to see the burning of his only son”(42). When Eliezer arrives at Auschwitz, the separation of his family puts an emotional toll on his father since he realizes that only him and Eliezer are still alive. This will be a catalyst to their relationship becoming stronger as they endure more together. Elie Wiesel, the author of the novel Night writes his own personal accounts of experiencing the Holocaust through the character Eliezer.