SUMMER READING JOURNAL 9 HONORS
Brianna Quirke
Timeline: What are the most important events in the novel?
1. Eliezer studies Kabbalah with Moishe the Beatle in the town of Sighet. Moishe the Beatle and all the foreign Jews are expelled from his town. Moishe tries to tell Eliezer about the horrific treatment of the Germans.
2. The Germans arrive in Eliezer’s town and two ghettos were soon created. They are told they will be going on a long journey. After a few days, Eliezer along with all the other Jews are liquidated.
3. After a long journey in transportation cars, Eliezer and his family arrive at what they soon realize to be a concentration camp. They soon realize that the Germans are burning Jews in the crematoria.
4. Eliezer and his father
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Eliezer has a gold crown his tooth that the Germans want to remove, but every time they go to remove it, he says he is ill. He holds onto it hoping it may be worth something. Characters: Describe the characters (personality and appearance) and their importance to the novel. If a character you have already met changes, include that change in your description.
Eliezer: narrator of the story and is 15 at the beginning of the novel. When he is free from concentration camp, he is 18. Eliezer is a brave and thoughtful boy who goes through his entire time at concentration camp with his father. Eliezer finds himself losing his innocence and faith that he once had.
On the day of Yom Kippur Eliezer thinks, “And then, there was no longer any reason for me to fast. I no longer accepted God’s silence. As I swallowed my ration of soup, I turned that act into a symbol of rebellion” (69). Eliezer loses all hope as his time at concentration camp continues.
Eliezer’s father: 50-year-old man who is a well-respected Jew in his town of Sighet. He grows close with his son during their suffering at concentration camp. He remains as a voice of wisdom and helps Eliezer stay strong. He dies from dysentery soon before the camp is
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Eliezer crosses paths with his angry Kapo, Idek, who takes out his fury on him. Idek severely beats Eliezer. After, Elie meets a French girl who speaks to him in perfect German to save his anger for another time.
8. One of the foremen named Franek sees Eliezer’s gold tooth and beats up his father until he agrees to have it extracted. Eliezer witness Idek having sex with one of the inmates and he whips him 25 times as punishment.
9. The camp gets bombed and Eliezer realizes that he doesn’t fear death anymore. On Rosh Hashanah, Eliezer wonders where God is and why he is letting this happen to him. He decides that man is stronger than God.
10. On Yom Kippur, Eliezer does not fast as an act of rebellion against God. He also chooses to eat because his father forbade him to fast to keep his strength.
11. Eliezer goes through his first selection and he passes. His father thinks he passes, but he doesn’t see them write his number. He must pass the second selection to not go to the crematoria. He gives a knife and spoon he kept to Eliezer because he thinks he might die.
12. Eliezer’s foot swells from the cold and he goes to the infirmary. A patient next to Eliezer tells him to leave before the next selection because Germany has no need for sick Jews. Eliezer has surgery on his
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.
So they hang out in the "ghetto". Then Elie’s family is shipped out on the last train. There are like 80 people all stuffed like sardines in the train. The conditions were awful. The trip lasts 3 days.
With the awful conditions and high risk of death they started to slide into cruelty themselves, only caring for themselves of survival. Sons leaving their fathers are starting to lose faith and Eliezer is one of
He and his family are later put on a train to an unknown destination along with other Jews from their town. Elie could not have imagined what he saw when the train stopped. The train stopped at Auschwitz, a concentration camp. When the passengers exit the train the men and women are separated and then the men are sorted into separate groups based on their health and skills. Elie is separated from his mother and sister immediately and never sees them again.
Dostoevski, a Russian journalist and philosopher, once stated, “There is only one thing that I dread; not to be worthy of my suffering.” Suffering requires a certain amount of worthiness, and offers the sufferer vast opportunities to deepen the meaning of the individual’s life. Eliezer Wiesel, narrator and author of Night, an autobiographical memoir, recalls the events of the Holocaust which he personally went up against, when he lived in the small town of Sighet and in the Spring of 1944, the Nazis took over the Jews in Sighet, including the Wiesel family. The Jews were then evaluated as to see who was physically fit to work, and Eliezer and his father were deemed healthy and suitable for specialized work units. The others who were not fit,
From the beginning of the memoir, Eliezer is dehumanized emotionally, but he continues to save his father. He does not turn against him and keeps supporting him until he dies. When the Frenchman and the Pole are beating Eliezer’s father, he says, “Eliezer…… Eliezer……. tell them not to beat
Eliezer is affected so badly that at times, he doesn’t care for his father. Something similar happens when his father is sick and dies. His father’s last words to him were calling for Eliezer, and he didn’t move. He ignored him on purpose. “Free at last!”
World War II had been raging for two years and was bout to enter Sighet. The Germans attempted to commit genocide on the 'lesser ' races, particularly Jews. Through the brutality witnessed, acts of selfishness, the death of his father, and the loss of his faith, Elie changed. Elie became a young man with a strong sense of mortality through it all. By the end of the war, Elie claimed to see himself as "A corpse contemplating me."
Eliezer has to learn how to adapt to not having as food as he used to, being beaten for no reason, and watching daily hangings. Eliezer specifically remembers one particular hanging of a young boy, a pipel, whose master has been gathered arms for the resistance. Eliezer said “But the third rope was still moving: the child, too light, was still breathing… ” Eliezer remembers how the child cried and remained alive for the next half an hour, before his body finally gives out and the child dies. Towards the end of the book, as the group that Eliezer and his father are in keeps running around Germany, and Eliezer has a choice to give up and die on the side of a road, but he continues to run because of his father. Eliezer says “My father’s presence was the only thing that stopped me.
World war ll was a very tragic war that resulted in 6 million Jews being murdered, The Nazis are to blame. Hitler not only wanted to kill the Jews, but torture them and force them to work in brutal conditions. Hitler's reason for the was to create a “perfect race”. If the Jews were not able to work they would send them to a gas chamber to kill them off quickly. Jews were beaten, whipped, shot, gassed, and burned.
The book starts out with twelve-year-old Eliezer in his hometown of Sighet. He leans the Cabbala from his teacher Moshe the Beadle. In fact, Moshe was one of the first Jews to be taken into the ghettos, and when he managed to escape, he attempted to warn everyone in Sighet. But, these warnings were overlooked, and as soon as they knew it, the whole town was crammed into a small ghetto. And soon after, they were all transported into camps.
In Night, Eliezer overcame the weight of losing all of his family at first and then later on seeing his father suffer. For a teenager that is a brutal situation to be
Religion can be compared to sprinting in a race, it is necessary to have the fortitude and forbearance, but out of all things, you need to contain leadership abilities. The book “Night” by Elie Wiesel exemplifies how fortitude aids in overcoming even the most gruesome events. This type of bravery is attained by the Jewish religion. This religion is grounded in structure and the German Nazis took it away from Jews thus making a plethora of them lose or question their belief in God. In the novel, The author's own faith starts to lose momentum when witnessing the agonizing death of countless innocent lives, the brutal status of their domain, and mayhem brought forth because of persecution.
As time progresses, he becomes confined to his bed and cannot move. Eliezer brings him soup and coffee, but at the same time he regrets it and thinks to himself how he should leave his father and conserve his strength. The other prisoners beat his father and steal his food. His father had dysentery so he is always thirsty, but it is dangerous to give it to him. Eliezer tries to get medical aid, but the doctors will not help him because he is an old man.
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.