The Excruciating Scourge of The Jews Art Spiegelman, in the Graphic Novel Maus, and Tadeusz Różewicz, in the poem The Survivor, together introduce the impairment of the Jewish people, showing how they were brutally murdered, and treated like animals. The Jewish people were blamed for everything wrong that happened in Germany, according to Adolf Hitler. Leading the Third Reich, he explained to all of Germany of what the Jews had done, claiming that they had caused the Great Depression. They used the Jewish people as a scape goat to all their problems, and that is what led to such disastrous consequences. The book Maus, and the poem The Survivor show what had happened to the Jewish people, explaining the dehumanization and animalization of …show more content…
They were always stripped of their rights as humans, one by one, little by little, until they were worse than animals themselves. The Germans would treat everyone that was a prisoner in the camps poorly, however, the Jews were treated the worst. While Vladek was in the camps as a prisoner of war, he was forced to starve and live in tents, as Vladek says, “Brrr. The Polish get heated cabins.” And someone else responds with, “Yes, and we’re just left to freeze in these tents” (55). The Jewish prisoners of war were not considered the same as the Polish, even though they were fighting against the Germans. They gave proper living conditions to normal prisoners of war but showed their real authority towards the Jews. Time and again, the Germans would show that the Jews were worse than anything else in the world and deemed them lower whenever possible. Furthermore, the Germans didn’t only animalize the Jews in the camps, but also unknowingly achieved this while the Jews would hide for their lives. While Vladek was in a town looking for his cousin Miloch, he learned that Miloch was living “Inside this garbage hole [that] was separated by a tiny space – maybe only 5 feet by 6 feet” (155). He lived in this garbage dump with his wife and three-year-old child in someone’s backyard, trying to survive in the cold. They were living in conditions that compared to animals, were definitely worse, and shows to what extent the hand of the Germans went. The Jews were degraded terribly, and forced to live in such dire conditions, which show the effects of dehumanization. Since people had to live in such dreadful circumstances, they would do anything to increase their chances of survival, which could go as far as to betraying your own
Survival: All That Matters If one were stuck in a survival situation with literally thousands of other people just like them, who’s survival would they look out for? Their fellow man, or them self? Elie Wiesel is faced with this very decision during the Holocaust of the 1940s, which he recollects in his memoir, Night.
Death and Survival: What Gives Us the Will to Continue? What can cause someone with total passion for life to completely give up? What is their ultimate weakness? " Night" gives a vivid picture of Elie Wiesel's life during the Holocaust.
Family is always there to help us and to get us through rough times. Night by Elie Wiesel took place in 1944 and is an autobiography telling us about Elie 's time in the concentration camps. In the novel, they went to four different camps. Those camps were, Birkenau, which is the reception center for Auschwitz, then to Buna, Gleiwitz, and finally to Buchenwald where they were saved by American troops. By examining the novel Night, we can see that family is the key to survival, which is important because those who do not have family often aren 't able to survive because they don 't have someone pushing them forward and helping them in life.
Themes: Loss Throughout the book loss is always prevalent. In the beginning of the book Barns are being burnt down. Not only just the barns were burned the animals inside and along with the hay. This was devastating to the amish because that his how they made their living.
According to the texts, The Holocaust had a negative effect on the people who lived through it. Jews were first made to fear the Gestapo so greatly that they felt that they were told what to do and had to do it. They were put in concentration camps and Ghettos where they were treated horribly and were badly abused. Soon enough, 6 to 9 million people died as a result of the Holocaust. According to the three texts, Holocaust survivors suffered negative effects due to the fact they had been abused, lost loved ones and treated as less than human.
Ever since humans came to be, they have done many things to ensure their survival. It’s the reason why we humans have evolved as much as we have. Humans have invented devices, accomplished many challenges, and have even relied on nothing but willpower to survive. When somebody survives a tragic event they are left with some terrifying memories that haunt them forever, but a few survivors are courageous enough to share their experience. Obviously, one of the shared experiences is the book called Night by Elie Wiesel.
When reading the book “night” by Elie Wiesel, you can never be sure something is to be set in stone. Even the characters drastically change from societies previous distorted visions of a Jew to the primordial beast that dwells over the basic components of survival itself. For example, a selfless and cultured man known as Eliezer’s father is forced to adapt himself into a man so full of sorrow not even his own wife would be able to recognize him. What did this? Many may say it was the loss of God.
Survival of the fittest The theme of survival of the fittest is shown throughout the memoir Night. Night was written by Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel. In this memoir Elie explains as well as shows survival of the fittest, by sharing his story of his struggles along with countless other Jews during the holocaust. He illustrated the theme of survival of the fittest in the memoir night through the situations of Elie lying about his age during selection, the Rabbi's son leaving his father, during the death march, and the son killing his father over a crust of bread.
In many ways, Nazis had physically, mentally, and emotionally dehumanized their victims. The Jews were treated so badly by the Nazis that they felt as if they weren’t even humans; they felt like animals. For example, the Jewish prisoners were always being yelled at with harsh tones. Eliezer only remembers one time when a Polish
The severely cruel conditions of concentration camps had a profound impact on everyone who had the misfortune of experiencing them. For Elie Wiesel, the author of Night and a survivor of Auschwitz, one aspect of himself that was greatly impacted was his view of humanity. During his time before, during, and after the holocaust, Elie changed from being a boy with a relatively average outlook on mankind, to a shadow of a man with no faith in the goodness of society, before regaining confidence in humanity once again later in his life. For the first 13 years of his life, Elie seemed to have a normal outlook on humanity.
Resilience is the ability to recover quickly from difficulties. It is the ability to bounce back, no matter if it 's an object or person. As Margaret Thatcher said, “You may have to fight a battle more than once to win it.” In the book, Night, by Elie Wiesel, a young Elie Wiesel and his family are taken from their hometown, Sighet, and sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp. In this book, Wiesel relives and tells the horrors and nightmares of what his friends, family, and himself went through while in the camps.
In Night by Elie Wiesel the author shows resilience is how people survive through difficult times. Elie shows resilience by never giving up hope on surviving and working hard to keep his life going to make it out of the war. A specific instance is when they have begun the run from one camp to another with the SS shooting people who were left behind “I kept repeating to myself ‘Don’t stop, don’t think, run!’ Near me men were collapsing into dirty snow. Gunshots.”
Elie Wiesel and Gerda Weissmann were both Jewish prisoners that were taken from their homes and forced to work in factories with terrible conditions for Nazi Germany. They both had very different experiences during their time in concentration camps and slave labor facilities, but after watching the documentary, “One Survivor Remembers,” and the memoir Night, one can determine the differences and similarities between Weissmann’s story and Wiesels’s story in terms of driving motivations in the will to survive. To start, one similarity is that both Wiesel and Weissmann had a family figure that kept their motivation strong and prevented them from committing suicide. In both accounts, the family figure happens to be their fathers. In the documentary,
In the passage in Night By Elie Wiesel, Published in 1956 Elie and the other ‘prisoners’ are being forced to run to new barracks while being beat by the kapos and the harsh snow. They wonder whether they have been at the camp for days, weeks? They find they have only been there for an hour .This scene reveals the loss of identity eliminates hope and prosperity especially when the soul is being sucked out of a
This book shows how the Holocaust should be taught and not be forgotten, due to it being a prime example of human impureness. Humans learn off trial and error, how the Jewish population was affected, decrease in moral, and the unsettled tension are prime examples of such mistakes. The Jewish population was in jeopardy, therefore other races in the world are at risk of genocide as well and must take this event as a warning of what could happen. In the Auschwitz concentration camp, there was a room filled with shoes.