Throughout our lives, we are faced with difficult situations, and possibly even life or death situations. As humans, our instinct is to take these difficult situations and find the best way to get over them. Sometimes these situations and predicaments get so difficulty that there is no way out of it. When this happens, people will do things that they would never dream of doing in order to survive. In history, we can see many incidents where people have gone to extremes just to survive these difficulty situations, such as; the people of the Donner Party, those associated with the Andes Flight Disaster, and the crew members of the Luxborough Galley. In Jose Saramago’s Blindness, we see characters in the book have to make difficult decisions during life or death situations, such as guards killing blind people in hopes of not contracting the blindness, blind citizens stealing goods from stores and even people preaching …show more content…
Just as the people of the Donner Party, the Andes Flight Disaster, and the Luxborough Galley had resorted to cannibalism and other extreme means to survive, so did the characters in Blindness. At first, the citizens of blindness were not resulting to extremes in order to survive because they had guards who were providing food, but as the story went on almost every single person went blind. This is when the people began to resort to things such as raiding stores, stealing, eating raw animals, and even cannibalism. These illegal, horrendous acts can lead a reader to wonder what these people’s motives were. Are these people simply afraid of what comes after death? Or are these people trying their best to stay alive for their families? Either way, any normal human being would not commit these acts unless they were faced with possible death. Personal opinion can only identify if these actions were
Night Essay By Shaynna For a young child, one of the most difficult duties to deal with is the separation from the people and objects they know and care about, such as their home, friends and family. This can be seen all over the world, weather its a young adult moving away from home, or the loss of a family member many people struggle with change and separation. The key to getting through these situations is to believe that as an individual they have the courage to get through it.
Adam Vogel Mrs. Gruhn English 11 02 November 2017 Night Essay How far would someone go to survive in an unimaginable situation, that tests your faith, turns you against your family, and makes you wonder if you can go on. As World War 2 raged on it wasn't only soldiers who were being killed, millions of Jews were rounded up and put into concentration camps. One young Jewish boy named Elie Wiesel had the courage to write about all the horrors that he experienced during his time at Auschwitz. Everyone has certain needs that have to be meet in order to live.
Survivor stories have held the truth about disasters in the world better than oral storytelling can possibly achieve. The only thing readers would assume about survivor stories is the recurring idea of surviving a horrible incident. However, two particular survivor stories - Night, a memoir by Elie Wiesel about his horrid experience in the Holocaust; and Revenge of the Whale, the true story of the whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick - have more resemblances and distinctions than one could see. The straightforward system that Eliezer Wiesel from Night uses to maintain hope is inadequate to the hope-crushing techniques the crew members from Revenge of the Whale use.
Survival Essay Three paramount traits needed to survive any life or death situation are bravery, knowledge, and perseverance. Characters in the story Most Dangerous Game, the movie Castaway, and even people in the article “The Migrant Crisis” will show us why all of these traits are good to have in survival situations. Bravery is an important trait to have when trying to survive. You are faced with many scary or difficult circumstances in a survival situation and you need a brave mindset to tackle those challenges. “Rainsford remembered the [gun] shots...he swam in that direction…” (Connell, 2) shows that even though the sound of gunshots usually don’t mean well, Rainsford decided to swim toward that potential danger, even knowing that
At some point in our lives we experience troubling times, whether it 's a minor problem or a major one. Some of us have experienced things we cannot even begin to imagine. Two people who have experienced troubling times are Elie Wiesel, in Night, and Jeanne Wakatsuki, in Farewell to Manzanar. Both of them have gone through terrible, unimaginable journeys but lived in different conditions.
"If you're going through hell, keep going," -Winston Churchill After witnessing the Haitian people's response to the earthquake that destroyed their homes in 2010, journalist Leonard Pitts wrote an essay about his observations. Although many different conclusions can be reached after reading the essay, one message stood out. The main point of the essay is that sometimes, the earth is cruel, but human beings are strong. Pitts proves his point by describing three things: the disasters that fill our world today, the people who suffer through these disasters, and the hopelessness of the situation. First, Pitts explains that the earth is cruel by describing the disasters that fill our world today.
Hardship is an endeavor no person yearns for, and logically it’s fathomable why we’d steer away from difficulties. However, one can only value what they have when they’ve survived the unimaginable, because without hardships we’d be oblivious to the triumphs in life. History is an abyss of unfortunate events, nevertheless we have conquered every setback. The civil war, for example, was one of the United States most traumatic times. Much can be said about the bloodiest four years in american history, but overall in order to find harmony between the divided sides, we had to fight battle by battle for a cause that, with all the gruesome sacrifices no longer seemed worth it.
Perhaps the famous old saying, “Sometimes even to live is an act of courage,” applies to almost anyone. This saying also pertains to life especially when one is encountered by dreadful or horrific circumstances. This is very much true for three mysterious and valiant people who share their own stories. A true survivor has the ability to survive physically, mentally, and emotionally under any given circumstances and lives until the very end to signify it. The autobiographies, Night by Elie Wiesel, Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki, and Mud, Sweat, and Tears by Bear Grylls displays how having character traits, such as determination, helped them survive through their past journeys in life, to succeed in informing readers about their experiences.
There are days when the world feels like it 's falling down in fiery bits and pieces on top of one’s head, and then there are the days when the world is actually falling to pieces. Humans have often constructed their own protective barriers, and carried on amidst what would be deemed apocalyptic circumstances. These circumstances are viewed as having no other purpose other than making life extraordinarily hard and discouraging humanity to continue their existence. Instead, tragedy and suffering through it serves to unite all of the human race by tugging on the heartstrings. Compassion and empathy makes suffering a continually melding experience of humanity.
This is thoroughly portrayed in Night by Elie Wiesel, the “Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech” by Elie Wiesel, and in the New York Times article “150th Anniversary: 1851-2001; Turning Away From the Holocaust” by Max Frankel. On the contrary, when individuals are put in tragic situations, it can strengthen their hope and motivation to survive. For instance, in Night, Wiesel stated “‘Don’t be afraid,’ he said. ‘Everything will be alright.’... Every one of his words was healing and every glance of his carried a message of hope.
The history of blindness came from a time where it was difficult to even keep someone around that was blind. People were giving away their children, abandon them, leaving them to die (Omvig 2017). As shocking as it is, of course everyone is scared of the unknown, this was not very common and seeing someone who was blind was a whole new thing. Once it became a very common
In Germany during World War Two was a time where everyone had to fight for themselves to survive, using and sacrificing others in the bloody, crippling, concentration camps. That is what almost everyone would think at first, because most humans want to live and experience what the world can offer. However, there are certain situations where people do the opposite and perform actions for the sake of others and that would harm themselves. In the comic book series of Maus by Art Spiegelman, book Night by Elie Wiesel, movie The Book Thief directed by Brian Percival, and there is a parallel idea. The common theme within these several works is self-sacrifice.
In order to survive our adversities some of us need survival factors. For instance, Salva Dut from “A Long Walk to Water” by Linda Sue Park needed survival factors in order to survive his adversities. This book is nonfiction and explains the story of Salva Dut-Ariik and what he did to survive. Salva used many survival factors such as bravery, hope and determination. Salva needed bravery.
Tom Godwin’s short story “The Cold Equations” illustrates how one should think of and become accepting of their consequences whether it's deserved or not. The story is about an Emergency Dispatch Ship, also known as an EDS, with the pilot on a mission to give a group of six men who have a fatal fever. The pilot, Barton, during his mission finds a stowaway named Marilyn found in a small closet on the ship. Marilyn was a young girl trying to go to Mimir, for she had a destination waiting and hoped to see her brother who she hasn't seen in 10 years, but little did she know that there was a previously set protocol that determines the life of a stowaway. Barton had sympathy for the girl and did his best to help her by contacting headquarters and asked if there was any way he could spare Marilyn’s life
What motivates people to move through hard times and moments? In a passage in Anne Frank: Diary of A Young Girl, Anne is scared when thinking about the concentration