How Does Elie Wiesel Change Throughout The Book Night

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Imagine everything that keeps you human being quickly stripped away from you, turning your importance into a number on a chart. This is what Elie Wiesel experiences in the Holocaust and is what he wants to express to the reader in Night. His character changes drastically throughout the memoir, changing him from a happy, carefree religious boy to a desensitized husk of his former self, broken by his experiences in Auschwitz. When the memoir begins, Elie’s biggest concern was his belief that he should study Kabbalah, while his father believes he is too young. Then he shifts the tone of the memoir with the line “And then, one day all foreign Jews were expelled from Sighet. And Moishe the Beadle was a foreigner,” (Wiesel, 6.) The memoir shifts

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