Even so, in spite of his beliefs, he prays for strength not end up like another man who allows his father to die for his own sake. We can see from various points in his life that he has no doubt that there is a God, but there is an emphasized bitterness that overtakes him towards the character of God during his years of suffering.
11. Throughout a majority of their time in imprisonment Eliezer and his father have a strong bond that keeps them going. This is in contrast to before their capture when Eliezer has a resentment for his father's concern for others before his own family. Through the camps Eliezer and his father continue to look out for each other and hold a strong connection. Even so, towards the end of the memoir, his father is
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In this memoir, Wiesel uses light and darkness to highlight certain themes. One of first scenes of darkness occurs at the beginning of the story where it says "Night fell" upon the Jews who were filled with faith regardless of their situation. During the train ride to the concentration camp, when it was stated that "It must have been midnight," the Jews continued to stay hopeful when hearing news of split up families. At midnight, Eliezer arrived at Birkenau and witnesses the crematories that consumed the Jews. On page 94, Eliezer talk about how all light was lost naturally by saying " The days were like nights, and the nights left the dregs of darkness in our souls." The darkness in each of these scenes provides the theme of evil. In the same way, light resembles faith in God.Through these scenes an optimism is seen by many of the Jews and their religion is kept first through the darkness. This provides a light emotionally for …show more content…
One of the first character conflicts seen in this memoir is when the words of Moshe are overlooked by disbelief. Eliezer's action to this is acknowledging Moshe's words regardless of his doubt. His motives are to make Moshe forget about the events that he says have happened. Eliezer's state of mind to this situation and his current surroundings are affected by his lack of knowledge about what the Germans are capable of and what takes place in the concentration camps. In various chapters following, Eliezer gets faced with many hardships and his state of mind is initially bitterness, but because of his drive to survive, his actions result in either reacting and getting punished or submitting and taking the hardships in silence. In the very last chapters we see a shift in Eliezer's character. His father gets weaker and soon dies, causing Eliezer's state of mind to fall. One passage included "It no longer mattered since my father's death, nothing mattered to me anymore." Regardless, his motives for survival drove him to act upon it to become self reliant and untouchable in order to
Eliezer and his father got separated from his mother and younger sisters. For months in the concentration camps, Eliezer witnessed inhumane doings that scarred him for the rest of his life. He was forced to work at Buna, a factory, and run on a daily basis to keep himself alive. He became malnourished because of the unappetizing food that they served. He and other Jews were punished and beaten for no reason.
Unlike the ones who surround him, Eliezer escaped the fate of turning into an animal and is shown in his relationship with his father when the prisoners are sent to run and he doesn’t leave his father like Rabbi Eliahu’s son, when he runs after his father as he is sent to the left during selection, and when he gives his father his rations of coffee and soup because he is not given anything. In the book Night, prisoners are evacuated from their prisons and sent by foot to other prisons due to the Russians who were going to liberate the prisoners. During this they have to run the whole way so the Nazis can keep their prisoners, many prisoners start to fall behind because of the distance and their bodies. A Rabbi ends up to be one of these prisoners who starts to fall behind and when they get to the other prison he looks for his son.
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, you’re transported into the Holocaust and read as a young man finds his life turning upside down. As everyone knows the Holocaust was an awful time and many inhumane acts were made Hitler and his following. In this book you get to see the tragedies through Eliezer Wiesel's eyes and feel his pain as you read. Eliezer and his family are Jews, so Hitler and the Nazis drove their friends and family out of their homes. His family was then moved to a concentration camp where the men and women were split, That was the last time Eliezer saw his mother and sisters.
Eliezer’s father’s presence next to him running during the brutal march is what was keeping Eliezer running. Eliezer wanted to die but didn’t because he was his father’s sole support system. Eliezer needed to survive for his father’s sake without Eliezer his father wouldn’t of had any chance of surviving. Eliezer wasn’t afraid of dying in fact he considered it. Eliezer said, “The idea of dying, of ceasing to be, began to fascinate me.
He thinks of others before himself and makes sure everyone is comfortable. “My sisters and I were still allowed to move about, as we were destined for the last convoy, and so we helped the best we could.” If this event would have happened later in the story Eliezer would have been making sure he was okay and preparing for himself. Eliezer's change is more evident is an interview Elie did with
In the novel Night, the word night ironically is a motif, appearing again and again throughout the novel. One of its many appearances occurs near the beginning of the novel when Elie and his family are going to move into a smaller ghetto. “It was to be the last night spent in our house.” It next appears on the train when they hear that Aushwitz will be their last destination and that conditions were good. “Suddenly we felt free of the previous nights’ terror.”
(Wiesel 112). Eliezer is sad when his father dies, but is more relieved because he can take care of himself now. Another way Eliezer is dehumanized mentally is through his religion. Before he was sent to the concentration camps, Eliezer believed God always knew best. But as the memoir goes on, Eliezer loses his faith.
Although as noted throughout the story Eliezer had to mature and at one point he became “nothing but a body. Perhaps even less: a famished stomach” (Wiesel 50). This quote helps show the loss of value he had of even himself. The horror of the Holocaust has broken this boy into losing every want but to just simply breathe. He was no longer living a life but was just a shell of himself now breathing.
“Yes, you can lose somebody overnight, yes, your whole life can be turned upside down. Life is short. It can come and go like a feather in the wind. ”- Shania Twain.
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Eliezer Wiesel narrates the legendary tale of what happened to him and his father during the Holocaust. In the introduction, Wiesel talks about how his village in Seghet was never worried about the war until it was too late. Wiesel’s village received advanced notice of the Germans, but the whole village ignored it. Throughout the entire account, Wiesel has many traits that are key to his survival in the concertation camps.
Eliezer was very close to god and wanted to learn anything he could. Once he was taken away from his home, he began losing faith in god and lost all hope. Eliezer stopped praying and he believed that god was unjust. Eliezer felt as though god was uncaring and so he stopped believing in him. His view on god changed juristically throughout Night.
Eliezer was faithful to God and humane towards his family, but after his brutal experience in the concentration camps, he would become faithless and relentless. Change was shown in Elie’s religious beliefs in
One day Eliezer comes to his father’s bed and he is gone most likely taken to the crematory. He doesn't mourn for him and feels bad because of it, but he also feels
Sometimes situations occur in our lives that happen because of chance awhile other times they occur because of a choice made. This is especially true with Eliezer in Elie Wiesel’s Night. Eliezer has a series of events happen to him that have happened be chance or by choice. Eliezer never asked to be a Jew in a time when it was so fatal to be one but it happened by chance.
Eliezer and his father rely on one another to survive through the Holocaust. Together they encounter the cruelty of the Nazis, the lack of compassion from the prisoners, as well as the difficulty of simply surviving. They remain strong together unlike other father-son relationships seen in the novel. A majority of the prisoners gravitate towards self preservation while Eliezer chooses to remain with his father. Eliezer does exhibit ambivalence in continuing to help his father because the conditions of the Holocaust continually make it harder to make others a priority than oneself.