The story of Elie Wiesel, his father and the other father son relationships. All of the fathers come and try to stay with their son as long as they can. They love them and they would die every day if they had to. The fathers, they try and give their sons everything just because how they live or even because they are alive a well. Their sons, deep down they love their father’s, but on the outside, they all just want to die. The burning of anybody dying, they just want to die too. Except for two of them.
The man who stole bread and his son- So the son’s father just wanted to keep himself and his son alive, but the son wanted his father died. I honestly don’t think that the son wanted his father dead, nevertheless, I truly believe that he would have done everything in his power to stay alive. If the father didn’t have bread, then yes, he might still kill him, moreover, I assume that he would want him alive. The father was genuinely weak, so he would have died that day or two. After the son killed his father he ate the bread, but suddenly died. Two men started to beat the son up for the bread. Even though the son killed his father, it’s worse than running away from your own father.
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Rabbi was so concerned about his son that he didn’t really care what happened to him. Nevertheless, he asked everyone if they have seen his son anyplace there. Elie said no he hasn’t seen his son. Although Elie did remember himself, seeing Rabbi Eliahou’s son. Elie remembered that when they were running Rabbi’s son was running beside him. Rabbi’s son saw his father fall down, but kept running. He thought that if he went to go help his father then that would slow him down so he left him there. Rabbi Eliahou did that to free himself from an encumbrance which could lessen his own chance of
Elie’s feelings change about his father countless times. He loves his father but he doesn’t really want him around anymore. This theme is not only important to the book, but it is important to life. Family will forever be complex, and navigating it can be harder, but Wiesel showed it was possible by illustrating to readers that there will always be good and bad times, it shows the internal conflict about whether he wants his father around or not, and it illustrates the dehumanization that broke the connection between Elie and his father. Most everyone loves their family, or they at least have someone, but at times, people need a break from them.
They were running to Gleiwitz and Elie was thinking of his dad and thinking that the only reason why he was still running was because of his dad so that is why he was still running. “My father’s
The reason Elie survived was because he had his dad by his side, pushing him to do his best and to
If only I could get rid of this dead weight, so that I could use all my strength to struggle for my own survival, and only worry about myself,’ I immediately felt ashamed of myself, ashamed forever,” (Wiesel, 111). This is just one example of the internal conflict going on endlessly within himself. In Night, the question asking whether family is a blessing or a curse is the most significant theme because it highlights good and bad times, it shows the internal conflict between whether he wants his father around or not, and it illustrates the dehumanization Elie faces throughout the Holocaust. When thinking of family,
Family; a blessing, or a curse? In the book Night, Elie Wiesel offers many significant themes, but the question, “is family a blessing or a curse,” is one of the most prevalent and begging themes in the novel. During the novel, Wiesel often questions if he should try and keep his father around, or if life would just be better without him in the picture. “‘Don’t let me find him! If only I could get rid of this dead weight, so that I could use all my strength to struggle for my own survival, and only worry about myself,’ I immediately felt ashamed of myself, ashamed forever,” (Wiesel, 111).
Think of a circumstance where you were so hungry and thirsty, that you did not even care to think about your father anymore. That circumstance goes against common father-son relationships. The common father-son motif is where the father looks out and cares for the son. In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he explains why the circumstances around a father-son relationship can change their relationship, whether it 's for the better or the worse. Since the book is about the life of Elie in a Nazi concentration camp, the circumstances were harsh and took a toll on multiple father-son relationships.
Elie 's inaction or inability to help his father and his guilt for not doing so helped Elie to shape the person he has become now is because he kept on realizing his stand on the situation on the harsh behavior towards his father. As he starts to live more with his father he became started to realize how important he was to him and how important he is for him. In the book Night, Chapter 7, when Elie and his after were on the cattle car he said"My father had huddled near me, draped in his blanket, shoulders laden with snow. And what if he were dead as well? I called out to him.
Night by Elie Wiesel describes his experience as a Jew in the Nazi concentration camps during WWII. Wiesel and other Jews Survived, but many others did not. The relationships between father and son were very important during the story. The relationships that many of the fathers and sons had were either, extremely harmful, helpful, or both for the son or father.
I think rabbi eliahu son did this because he knew that his father would not make the voyage. I also think he did this so that he did not have to take care of his father no more and he could just worry about himself. In
When he had the chance, Rabbi Eliahou’s son tried to lose his dad to increase his chances of survival.
Finally, after his fathers death, Elie felt worthless. Everything he did was merely to stay alive, and if he would’ve had that outlook from the beginning, he would not have made it as far as he did. To elaborate on my first point, Elie’s father was not only his advisor, but his protector as well. Many times, those two things went hand in hand.
Although many of the prisoners mock Wiesel and his father for marching, the father and son tolerate the ridicule and are aware that they have each other's backs. The father-son relationship here expands as they know that the survival of each other is more important than any sort of humiliation or embarrassment. When Wiesel's father thought that he was going to die, he says, "Here, take this knife… I won't need it anymore. You may find it useful.
After seeing Rabbi Eliahu search for his son and remembering that the son had rushed ahead, as if to escape
“I realized that he did not want to see what they were going to do to me. He did not want to see the burning of his only son”(42). When Eliezer arrives at Auschwitz, the separation of his family puts an emotional toll on his father since he realizes that only him and Eliezer are still alive. This will be a catalyst to their relationship becoming stronger as they endure more together. Elie Wiesel, the author of the novel Night writes his own personal accounts of experiencing the Holocaust through the character Eliezer.
What can happen to the rest of one's emotions once a survival instinct takes over is astonishing. Eliezer’s sick father, Shlomo, was the only link he had back into his past, his good life. Also Shlomo was a burden to Elie. Whenever Elie started admitting that his father was a burden, he caught himself and stopped because he felt ashamed and guilty. When his father finally died of Dysentery, Elie found himself doing the unthinkable, he had abandoned his father like the Rabbi’s son did to him.