Trinity Brown
Ms. Scauso
English 10
4/14/2023
Childhood Trauma
The book “Night” is a memoir written by Elie Wiesel who known to of survived one of history’s greatest atrocities, the holocaust. In “Night” we follow the journey of a Jewish teenage boy named Elie Wiesel who is taken to a concentration camp toward the end of the second world war. In the autobiography “Persepolis” by Marjane Satrapi, we follow the story of a young Iranian girl named Marji. In “Persepolis”, Marji has to face adversity during a time of war and sorrow after the islamic revolution. Elie Wiesel and Marjane Satrapi are two extremely different but extraordinary authors. Though they both lived through extreme conditions and atrocities, they had very different personalities
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At the beginning of Persepolis Marji is struggling to balance her religious and societal morals, due to how she was raised (Persepolis, page 10: online). While Marji eventually figures out her morals, Elie experiences the opposite. Elie Wiesel was an extremely religious boy with consistent morals before he entered the concentration camps during the holocaust. After he got out of the concentration camps he was so bent down and broken after losing most of his family, that he eventually stopped believing in God and lost his morals. Elie shows this in Night when he says, “In the beginning, there was faith—which is childish; trust—which is vain; and illusion—which is dangerous. We believed in God, trusted in man, and lived with the illusion that every one of us has been entrusted with a sacred spark from the Shekhinah's flame; that every one of us carries in his eyes and in his soul a reflection of God's image. That was the source if not the cause of all our ordeals.” (Night, pages …show more content…
Both of them were in strict and stressful environments, which negatively affected their personality. In addition, they were positively influenced by other factors. For example, when Marji got older she started listening to Kim Wilde (Persepolis, page 138 online). This influences Marji positively by feeding her rebellious spirit and helps change how she views the world. While Marji had Kim Wilde to influence her, Elie had more of a mentor. Moishe the Beadle was a Rabbi where Elie lived, and he was someone that Elie looked up to when he was young. Moishe helped fuel Elie’s faith in God and therefore influenced him to be religious. Due to these external influences affecting them positively and negatively it developed their personalities and set them down their life
Elie's character develops because he shows his loss of identity in his Jewish faith. Another example that supports the claim is when Elie stopped believing in the Jewish faith and says, “My eyes had opened and I was alone, terribly alone in a world without God, without man” (66). Weasel again describes as an unbeliever, he has
Where is hope placed in your life? From time to time it’s hard to keep this hope in a specific place, because eventually something or someone that comes into your life can move hope so far it becomes lost. Night, written by Elie Wiesel, talks about how his and other’s life throughout the holocaust completely changes. How life’s are crushed in a blink of an eye, and how humanity loses their true identity, due to what they may believe in. Taking this into Schindler’s list, directed by Steven Speilberg.
Anna Hathorn Ronda Beaudoin Honors English 10 6 March 2023 Elizer Wiesel’s Responses to Internal and External Conflicts and How They Shape His Identity The Holocaust caused the persecution of approximately six million Jews, all which went through internal and external conflicts. Eliezer is a one in 6 million accounts of the Holocaust, but he speaks for so many others that had their voice taken from them. He gives readers a first person account of the anguish that many went through. In Night, written by Eliezer Wiesel, the author's responses to internal and external conflicts develop his identity by displaying changes in his environment, his struggle with his religious beliefs, and his realization of how cruel the world is.
To tell the truth, Elie’s beliefs before the Holocaust is very spiritual, godly and orthodox. He used to spend most of his time at the synagogue temple worshiping his God. Since he always cried while praying a man named Masha the Beadle asked him why he prayed and Elie’s thought it was a very strange question but he still answered him with a confused face on his look as if he had known idea what he was saying. Elie’s said why he lives and why does he breath he said again he doesn’t know.” I succeeded on my own finding a master for himself in the person of Mash the Beadle’’.
They both were forced to work and had to endure the harshness of the concentration camps. Even so, they had many differences. For one, Anne wrote her novel in the camp and Elie wrote his after the experience, and was able to publish his himself. Anne passed in the camp whilst Elie passed after it. Anne also was in the Annex for a few years, meaning Elie was there
Alfred Münzer was born on November 23rd, 1941 in Nazi-occupied Netherlands. In the summer of 1942, when he was a year old, his father received summons for work duty, which entailed going to a camp. In response to this Alfred's family decided it would be best for the family to separate and hide, as it would give their children a chance to survive even if they were to be found. Alfred’s parents found refuge in a psychiatric hospital, his father as a patient, and his mother as a nurse, where, on December 31st, 1942, New Year’s Eve, all 250 hiding patients were arrested by the Nazis. Alfred’s sisters would follow suit after being shifted through multiple homes, and would consequently perish after being given up to the Nazis.
There were over 23 concentration camps that killed Jews over the course of the Holocaust, Over 6 million Jews died. In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel he shares his traumatic experience during the holocaust and how he and his dad navigated concentration camps. In comparison Anne Frank's “The diary of a young girl” talks about how she and her family had a safe place to hide while others were dying. In both books we can see that the main character's environment shapes their behaviors and beliefs, Even though both characters went through the holocaust differently they were still both highly affected.
Holocaust claimed many lives while leaving others to past on their accounts of the horrifying experience. David Olere shared his story through, Destruction of the Jewish People, while Elie Wiesel with his book, Night. Although the two individuals use different methods, the two were similar by introducing the concentration camps, the fire, and the destruction of their god. The most atrocious events were in the concentration camps.
Imagine being a fourteen-year-old child during one of history’s most atrocious memoir events. Elie Weisel's memoir Night reveals his experiences and memories during the holocaust in the years 1914–1945. The Holocaust was a period of appalling suffering and loss for Jews and non-Jews during Hitler's reign. During this period, Elie Weisel changed from a spiritually sensitive little boy to a spiritually dead, unemotional man. Elie Wiesel was emotional before the holocaust, in which he describes how his faith and religious passion were deeply rooted in a way that others about him could understand.
Survivor stories have held the truth about disasters in the world better than oral storytelling can possibly achieve. The only thing readers would assume about survivor stories is the recurring idea of surviving a horrible incident. However, two particular survivor stories - Night, a memoir by Elie Wiesel about his horrid experience in the Holocaust; and Revenge of the Whale, the true story of the whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick - have more resemblances and distinctions than one could see. The straightforward system that Eliezer Wiesel from Night uses to maintain hope is inadequate to the hope-crushing techniques the crew members from Revenge of the Whale use.
Carter Denbrock Mr. Haadsma English 10B 27 February 2023 TITLE In Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, a primary theme of the book is that you must remain strong, while looking out for you and your families, even in the face of conflict and tragedy. Weisel recalls many points in time where he remained hopeful even when it seemed impossible. He and millions of other Jewish prisoners were at the hands of the merciless Nazi’s, Weisel recalls many events where he could have given up but would not allow himself to.
He had a father, a mother, and three sisters. His mother Sarah, and his younger sister Tzipora had the life snuffed out of their bodies slowly because they were not able to work, and therefore unable to live. And then there was his father, Shlomo. His father was his life source. He was Elie’s only reason not to throw himself into the sharp electric wire aligning the walls of the prison they were stuck in.
There are a few factors that help shape Elie’s identity. His faith is the biggest part of his life that shaped his identity. His relationship with his family helped to shape his identity. Moshe the Beadle helped shape Elie’s identity by helping him with studying the Kabbalah. Moshe the Beadle was also a role model and a father figure to Elie.
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.
He is Jewish, but he wants to go deeper into his religion and learn more about it. He becomes good friends with a man named Moishe the Beadle. Moishe is very knowledgeable about the religion and he teaches Eliezer a lot. Times passes, and soon Jews are being forced to move into ghettos. The ghettos are where they are to stay until they are evacuated from their towns to go somewhere else.