Elie meets Moishe the Beadle, who teaches Elie about Kabbalah
All of the foreign Jews are expelled from Sighet, including Moishe
Moishe returns to Sighet to tell the Jews about what he experienced, but no one believes him
German soldiers come to Sighet and begin to oppress the Jews slowly
Passover begins
The leaders of the Jewish community are arrested on the seventh day of Passover
The Jewish people are no longer allowed to own any valuables and are stripped of their belongings
The Jewish people must wear the yellow star to be identified at all times
Two ghettos are created and the Jews are transferred within them
Elie and his family are moved to the small ghetto
Elie and his family are moved out of the ghetto on one of the transports
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Elie vows to never be like the Rabbi's son and to never leave his father.
The Jews continue marching until they arrive in Gleiwitz
Juliek plays violin until he dies
There is a selection and Elie and his father are sent to different sides, A commotion booms and his father is able to switch sides.
They are sent on a train that makes constant stops to throw out the dead
They stop in German town and the civilians throw bread into the trains
They arrive in Buchenwald
Chapters 8&9:
They are sent to the showers, however, Elie's father wants to sit and not go on
An alert sounds
Elie is separated from his father, but finds him the next morning
The blocks are cleaned and Elie's father begins to suffer from dysentery
Elie goes to the doctor who says there is nothing he can do to save Elie's father
The other men begin to steal Mr. Wiesel's food and beat him because they can no longer stand
Elie's father has dysentery and now lays in his bunk. Elie tries looking for a doctor but is told that he is better off saving his rations to increase his chance of survival. At night, Elie's father cries for water to an SS officer, and the officer beats him off. The next day, his father has been replaced by another invalid and taken to the
Then Elie’s dad (Chlomo) finds out that the Germans are gonna ship the Jews somewhere (they don’t know yet). One early morning a nice cop warns the Wiesel family of the bad stuff that’s gonna happen. The Jews start packing their things. They start getting shipped out. Elie’s family isn’t picked to go on the first couple trains.
“Granted, our task is to inform. But information must be transformed into knowledge, knowledge into sensitivity and sensitivity into commitment”. This quote was written and told by Elie Wiesel to show the transformation of which Elie Wiesel went through as being a jew and during the holocaust. The quote states that “information must be transformed into knowledge knowledge into sensitivity and sensitivity into commitment all the words have something in common. Elie Wiesel was a survivor of the holocaust which back then was the worst experience in life.
Moishe returned to Sighet a few of months later saying all of the other foreigners were dead and he escaped; the Gestapo shot them all in cold blood. No one in the quiet town of Sighet believed him though. As 1944 rolled around, the Germans arrived; shortly after their arrival they forced the Jews into ghettos so they would be isolated from the
Elie is separated from his mother and his sisters, but he remains with his father. They lie about their ages so that they can live. If you are too young or too old you are of no use at Auschwitz. Later they arrive at Auschwitz and they lie again to Dr. Mengele and Elie says he is a farmer, not a student. After, they move on to the pit.
Once the Germans had come into Sighet and gotten comfortable, they took over. Separating the Jews into two “ghettos” and selecting them and taking them to the concentration camps. A couple days later Eliezer and his family were selected to go to the “secret” destination. Having being fooled thinking they were going to a better place than the ghettos , they had no idea what was in store for them.
Elie's relationship with his father in the beginning was distant, in the middle he was closer to his father, and by the end it was very deep and tied with their lives. Elie Wiesel in lived the small town of Signet, Transylivannia (current day Hungary). His father ,Shlomo, was a well respected man in the Signet community, but he wasn't very close with his family or with his only son Elie. Wisel recalls about his father's relationships, "My father was a cultured, rather unsentimental man. There was never any display of emotion, even at home.
Then things got worse and Jewish leaders were arrested along with taking away any gold, jewelry, or valuables the Jews owned, and they were made to wear a yellow star. Then the Jews were forced into two ghettos within their village. All the while, Elie and his family as well as many other Jewish families made no attempt to disobey the Germans and Hungarian police. Elie claimed at this time they were living in a state of delusion. Then the Jews were transported to Auschwitz by cattle cars fitting eighty people to each one with little food or water.
Night: Man’s Strength All throughout Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, he speaks of the wretched horrors of his experience in the shoes of a Jewish prisoner during the Nazi occupation in World War II. For every horror he speaks of, he depicts the madness, savagery, and depression of the atrocities he had been exposed to. These very depictions are the foundation of the idea that man’s strongest instinct is not the need to help, to raise a family, to fight, but to sacrifice morality for the right to survive. To begin to examine this factor of behavior, we must begin with the initial crimes committed when he arrived at the camp.
Eleven million lives were massacred in one of the world’s darkest moments attempting to create a perfect race. In 1944 Germany began to lose in World War II, Adolf Hitler's final solution aimed the blame towards Europe's Jewish population, gypsies, and homosexuals. Together Hitler and the Nazi regime progressively deprived the Jews, gypsies and homosexuals of their rights. Many people were brought to labor camps by train. The conditions in the camps were inhumane.
Five years later, the Wiesels and other jews in the city of Sighet were segregated into a closed off subdivision called the ghettos. After being transported to different ghettos throughout towns and cities, they were all forcefully loaded into crowded cattle cars. Traveling through Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland to get to an unknown destination, in a mobbed train car, with an insufficient amount of food and space, is what the throng of people had to endure if they had any want for survival. Upon arriving at Auschwitz, the throng of Jews were divided by gender. As he watched his mother and three sisters walk away, not knowing if they will ever see each other again, Elie was conflicted with the thoughts of suicide as he sees horrific scenes play out in front of
After reading page four this passage immediately stood out to me as peculiar. I have never heard of, or witnessed, someone crying during prayer, and it presents itself as an extremely unorthodox response to the situation. Although, I can only wonder if he cries because he feels such a deep connection to God in those moments, or because God has yet to answer his many questions and it’s frustration that is causing the tears. (74 words) This moment truly marks the end of Elie’s childhood as he must now take the role of an adult to help himself and his family through these tragic times.
Think of a circumstance where you were so hungry and thirsty, that you did not even care to think about your father anymore. That circumstance goes against common father-son relationships. The common father-son motif is where the father looks out and cares for the son. In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he explains why the circumstances around a father-son relationship can change their relationship, whether it 's for the better or the worse. Since the book is about the life of Elie in a Nazi concentration camp, the circumstances were harsh and took a toll on multiple father-son relationships.
Briar William Kentzel Ellie and his father have a different relationship than most during the Holocaust. Elie and his father try to stick together during their time in the camps. Meanwhile, many young boysthe other sons are trying to get away from their fathers as to lift the burden they create. During this time, the fathers are trying to stay with their kids and provide for them during the rough time. Elie tries to stay with his father even when he gets sick, but he sometimes wonders if he should just leave him behind.
Before they were sent to concentration camps, Elie and his father had a common/typical father-son relationship. Now, they both heavily rely on each other and all they have is each other. I think they have both come to represent the only reason for living to the other. Elie seems to have constant suicidal thoughts, but his want to stay with his father always seems to slightly deter them. I’m sure his father thinks in the same way, if not more.