Discussion Forum #1: After reading the Preface To the Reader and Chapter 1 in the Lukens, Smith, and Coffel text there were several ideas that jumped out at me and be seemed to be significant and important to me. The ideas that I found significant and important while reading include: I found this excerpt from the Preface to the Reader to be very significant and important because Classic books are usually books that are seen as being notable because of the message that they are portraying to their audience. Classic books are usually books that portray to their audience a specific theme or they portray to the audience a historical event. For example, for my Theological Ethics class we had to read the book Night by Elie Wiesel and I find that to be a Classic book because it tells the story of Elie Wiesel and his life in the concentration camps during the Holocaust. The book Night shows children how life was during the Holocaust and I believe that is something that children should learn about because it is a terrible thing what happened to those people who entered those concentration camps and children should know that they should appreciate the life that they have been given. Other classic books that have been published may deal with immigration, which is an oncoming topic in today’s world and I think that all children should …show more content…
For example, if you are talking to someone and you are using vulgar language, while there is a young child in the room, they are most likely going to repeat what you are saying because they do not know the meaning of the words that you are using and they do not realize that those words are terrible and should never be used. They say when teaching a child a second language besides English, it should be done when they are young because it is easier for them to absorb the information than it is when you get
The book starts in 1941. Elie is a young kid who loves studying Judaism. He reads the Talmud a lot. He studies with this dude named Moshe Beadle. Moshe is a handyman who digs religion.
In Night, written by Elie Wiesel, the hanging of the little Dutchman pipel in chapter 4 symbolizes the death of faith in religion among Elie and other Jews who witnessed the act. In the plot, the young pipel was killed mercilessly by SS officers. During his execution, carried out alongside two other inmates, all found to be in possession of arms, onlookers were desperate for God to offer his supreme help. “Where is merciful God, where is He?” (64) and “For God’s sake, where is God?”
Nothing Throughout the book, Night the Nazis tortured and dehumanized their victims through several methods. During the first night in camp Elie Wiesel said “A truck drew close and unloaded its hold: small children. Babies!
The book, Night by Ellie Wiesel, is about Moche the Beadle who is from modern-day Romania which is also called Sighet, Transylvania. The book first introduces the family of Moche to us. The family is Jewish. The narrator, Wiesel, wants to learn about religious mysticism and he picks Moche to be his teacher. Moche gets deported from Romania and a couple months later he escapes from Poland.
In chapter five of the Holocaust memoir Night, by Elie Wiesel, Elie’s relationship with his father grew stronger while his relationship with his God became weaker. After being faced with the horrors in the concentration camp, Elie’s belief in an intangible God is replaced by the immediate urge to tend to his father’s needs. The love shared between them is the only drive he has to stay alive. Due to these circumstances, Elie slowly begins to lose hope in the god he once adored, but gains an inseperable bond with his father.
Loss of Faith and Childhood Innocence Since it first came out in 1960, over 10 million copies of Night by Elie Wiesel have been sold; the moving story recounts the anecdote of a firsthand account of the Holocaust. Professor and author Ellen S. Fine comments that the book "[...] communicates the vision of a nightmare: the voyage from a familiar to unknown world, a son's perception of the slow death of his father and the spiritual death of himself" (48). It outlines the author as a teenager before and during the Holocaust, including his relationships, the horrors he witnesses, and his journey with faith.
Wiesel compared his mother's face to a mask in order to depict how she was petrified that all of this was happening. Surprisingly his father was crying and yet his mother was the one showing barely any emotion. His mother knew what to expect, their horror has just begun and she is all ready changed. A mask is a covering for the face that one may use to hide or disease themselves. Wiesel’s mother was trying to be strong for her children, despite of the circumstances.
After watching the documentary I think you really get a sense of how horrific the Holocaust was. I mean we always learn about it in school, but it is usually through textbooks and primary source documents. We learn about the atrocities; however the American educational system touches upon it lightly. Ultimately, Americans only get a small idea of what the Holocaust was especially to the Jewish people. We learn so much about the Holocaust, but not about who lived by it.
I think the significance of the name ‘night’ really relates to many different aspects of the book. Many times the main character, Elizer, references or relates his surrounding to the darkness of the night, or the cold. It could also be taken as a form of blindness the prisoner go through. They are treated rough and under very harsh conditions without any knowledge of what going on or what is going to happen. It could also be talking about blackness and darkness they go through.
Response to Literature Essay Auswitz had 11 million death throughout the 12 years the holocaust was happening. There was only 300 survivors out of 11 million. This shows how many people went through the worst time in history and how many people lost their lives earlier then they should have. The description of Night by Elie Weisel was set in a concentration camp Aushwitz and his experiences throughout each parts of the camps .His
Night Response Paper Reading this memoir about the horrific genocide is very disturbing. It makes me upset that millions of innocent people are killed for literally nothing. How does Eliezer tolerate dehumanization, why didn't the Aryans help the Jews, how does Eliezer survive with small amount of food, these questions go through my mind everytime I read the memoir, Night. I’m learning a lot as I’m reading this memoir. For example, how the prisoners are dehumanized and what their life is like in concentration camps.
Lets begin with how Elie was forced by the Nazis to go to Auschwitz at the age of only 15 years old. The Auschwitz concentration camp is located in Poland, where they didn't even think about feeding him, and treated him harshly. Both of Elie’s parents and a younger sister passed away in the Holocaust because they were getting treated like dolls. It was the most horrific time in time for the Jews. Elie Wiesel is very lucky that he lived through the Holocaust for us we have proof and information about what they did to Jews and for Elie, he spared his life and lived through it telling the world what happened to him.
Wiesel uses this passage from chapter 2 of his memoir, Night, to tell readers that he had gotten to a point where nothing mattered to him anymore and that he had turned himself off emotionally. We know this because he described his and the other prisoners' brains as incapable of thinking, while also mentioning that their senses were numb. This indicates that Wiesel and the other prisoners were so stunned by what they had seen in the concentration camp, Auschwitz, that they could no longer process the inhumanity of the world they were in. Their senses were numb after witnessing the inhumanity that was displayed in front of them. They had come to terms with the fact that they might die here.
To find a man who has not experienced suffering is impossible; to have man without hardship is equally unfeasible. Such trials are a part of life and assert that one is alive by shaping one’s character. In the autobiographical memoir Night by Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, this molding is depicted through Elie’s transformation concerning his identity, faith, and perspective. As a young boy, Elie and his fellow neighbors of Sighet, Romania were sent to Auschwitz, a macabre concentration camp with the sole motive of torturing and killing Jews like himself. There, Elie experiences unimaginable suffering, and upon liberation a year later, leaves as a transformed person.
Chapter One Summary: In chapter one of Night by Elie Wiesel, the some of the characters of the story are introduced and the conflict begins. The main character is the author because this is an autobiographical novel. Eliezer was a Jew during Hitler’s reign in which Jews were persecuted. The book starts out with the author describing his faith.