Decisions do not change your chance. In Night, a Memior written by Ellie Wiesel in 1958, a young boy by the name Ellie Wiesel suffers through the Holocaust with his father Shlomo Wiesel. Ellie Wiesel first experiences the Nazi party after being evacuated from his house and put in a ghetto. At this time Jewish people did not know the motive of the Nazi party. After being in the ghetto for a few months Ellie, his father, his mother, and sister where forcefully taken from their home and put in concentration camps. Ellie wiesel survived the holocaust out of pure luck. Because him and his father were saved from the gas chambers due to the Germans needing to evacuate the camp. Ellie and his father were selected to go to the gas chambers but the quickly …show more content…
For example Author writes, “-How old are you, kid?" he asked. "Eighteen," I replied automatically. I could have said sixteen. Or even fifteen. But I had to say something. The officer left me alone and moved on down the line.-” (Night ) This shows that Ellie himself did not know why he said he was eighteen, rather then fourteen, fifteen, or even sixteen. He did not know why but he did and by luck. With the lack of knowledge Wiesel had, his answer was ultimately a coinflip and he happened to get it right. In other words Ellie’s decision was still completely up to luck and he got an important decision right. Ellie Wiesel survived the Holocaust due to luck, though hundreds of thousands of Jews were murdered, Ellie wiesel was among the few thousand that survived. In summary, Ellie surviving the selection to the gas chambers, the frigid snow ridden journey from Auschwitz to Buchenwald, and surviving the wrath of the SS officers was only possible with his luck and pure chance. In the world today your choices cannot outweigh chance and luck. An individual who is born into a higher class with more support will most likely be more successful then a person who is born into a lower class who works just as hard. This is the failure of the American dream in America. Not everyone has equal chances to succeed and not everyone is given the same opportunities. And in Night it was not up to the Jewish people to decide whether they survived or not. As a society after witnessing the horrors of the holocaust we as a country should give more opportunities to people and support people who need
Sammy, the narrator of the story, sarcastically observes the customers of A&P from his standpoint behind the cash registers. He's technically an adult at 19 years of age, but he still relates to the teenage girls who walk into the store, and he reacts to Lengel's authority with youthful rebellion. However, as a blue-collar worker, he has to face more uncertainties and fears about the future than the girls do, and he finds himself dreading the adult consequences of his actions at the end of the
In the memoir Night , Ellie Wiesel describes his horrific experiences as a young 15 year old Jewish boy during the Holocaust under the Nazi regime of Adolf Hitter. At the young age of thirteen, Ellie and his family were transported to numerous ghettos and concentration camps in which he witnessed and experienced the worst type of inhuman cruelty and torture ever Recorded. During Wiesel's time at Auschwitz it affected him physically ,mentally and spiritually, which he records in his memoir. While Ellie demonstrates weakness, he also displays moments of perseverance under the extreme circumstances of prosecution under the Nazi regime. Many lives were permanently altered by the Holocaust, impacting individuals physically, mentally, and spiritually
Did you know some people that survived the holocaust lived to tell their story? This is the story of holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel. In this story Elie tells us his story of what happened inside the camps. Elie used to go around and tell people his life story and what challenges he had to face and overcome. Overall Elie is a dynamic character because he questions his faith in God, changes the way he feels about his dad, and has emotional change.
They face many obstacles during this period of life such as loss of faith, starvation, and the loss of loved ones. So, when speaking about the holocaust what makes it an important memory? The answer is the pain and suffering the Jews would face at the camps. Ellie would experience his faith slipping away many times in his book night he explains. "I did not deny God's existence, but I doubted his absolute justice" (Wiesel 42).
Despite some people being in such drastic situations they still manage to show humanity in their actions. In the book “night” by Ellie Weisel. It talks about his life during the holocaust and what he had to go through while he was put in a concentration camp. Many of the inmates that Ellie Wiesel was in camp with had shown humanity in their own ways and actions despite being in such dangerous situations. And many of those actions could have impacted their survival.
Whereas others choose to suppress their memories, this is their way of finding peace and moving on with their life. The difference in individuals ways of coping with the trauma of the holocaust is justified in the opposition of opinions that Harry Weinberg and Elie Wiesel possess. Ellie Wiesel believes that the sharing of stories and memories from the Holocaust is crucial as it was "the last wish of the dead", therefore he holds himself as responsible to "devote [his] life to testify on behalf" of the people who did not make it out of World War II or the concentration camps alive. Wiesel writes "to remain faithful" to everyone who suffered the most appalling genocide in history; and to develop an understanding amongst all people of the ghastly events that took place under the Nazi's reign. Harry Weinberg portrays survivors that choose to let their stories and memories be forgotten and swept along as they find peace in their new life away from the horrific events that plague their memory.
Elie Wiesel and Anne Frank both suffered the tragedies of the holocaust. Elie spent the majority of his time in Auschwitz, a concentration camp in Poland, while Anne spent most of her time in the secret Annex. Though they had similar lives, they died very differently. Elie Wiesel was a celebrated author who survived the holocaust. According to the Washington Post, Elie was fifteen when he was captured and sent to Auschwitz on a cattle cart along with his father, mother, and three sisters and sent to Auschwitz.
After warnings about the bad intentions that Nazis in Germany had against Jewish the family of Wiesel and other Jewish in the city of Sighet decided to remain in the city. In a concentration camp called Auschwitz, Ellie gets separated from his mother and older sister but staying with his father. Ellie fights to survive hunger and abuse while having to face the destruction of his faith in god. He is forced to a situation where he does not know whether to support his father who kept on getting sicker and weaker or to give himself the opportunity to live.
Elie Wiesel a Holocaust Survivor In nineteen thirty-three Adolf Hilter and his Nazi army brought about the climax of antisemitism with the holocaust. Hilter claimed the Jews were the source of all their problems and the reason they lost World War one and the following economic downfall; Furthermore, Hitler believed that Germany could not be saved until the Jews were rendered powerless. The holocaust lasted from nineteen thirty-three to nineteen forty-five and millions of people were murdered. Elie Wiesel was one of the lucky few who escaped the concentration camps.
Ellie had finally made it out of the Holocaust at this
According to the National Holocaust Encyclopedia titled “Nazi Camps,” from 1933 to 1945, more than 44,000 concentration and incarceration camps were established, causing 11 million people to lose their lives, and 6 million of those were Jewish. Only a small handful of people survived. Among those who survived, Ellie Wiesel was imprisoned in camps while neutral countries only watched. Because of his experience, Wiesel believes “We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim.”
Ellie wanted to tear his face with his fingernails he said, but being thoughtful and more reserved he decided not to. If Ellie wasn’t reserved and thoughtful he would've died. He could've died on the train fighting for bread, he could've died when he wanted to eat out of the two unsupervised soup cauldrons, he could’ve died when he wanted to run into the electric fence when he first arrived in auschwitz, but being thoughtful and not so hot-headed he overcome these thoughts and urges and made the smart
Elie Wiesel and his family made the decision to not bear witness for many reasons, but in the end they came to regret it. His way of making sure that others do not make the same mistake was through his memoir Night. The only thing thing that came from The Holocaust are the lessons we learn from it. This is why it is essential for people to bear witness at all times. History tries to repeat itself.
Have you ever gone through a tough time in life? Well imagine being put through torture and torment as a young child even though you did nothing to deserve it. Two young teenagers, Anne Frank and Elie Wiesel were both apart of a horrible event called the holocaust. They both went through different things such as Anne Frank hid mostly entire time during the holocaust while Elie actually had to live through the full experience. Anne and Elie are different because of these three reasons, Anne Frank hid most of the time from the natzi soldiers, Elie was imprisoned, and Anne ended up dying in the holocaust while Elie survived the harsh experience.
How do you think a person can survive the most difficult thing that they had to face in their life? Well, Vladek Spiegelman(a survivor from the Holocaust) did do something that helped him in the Holocaust to survive that event. First, he would use his connections to people to help him survive. Another example of these things making part of how he survived was that he would get help from people to seek out information about places that he can hide in such as Mrs. Kawka’s farm. The final example of him being very resourceful and creating luck is him being able to work, for example, when he was at the P.O.W camps, When the Nazis were in need of war prisoners to volunteer for labor assignments, people that the Nazis offered from the job would be