Millions and millions of Jews were killed by the Nazis during the Holocaust. The dehumanization of the Jewish people by the Nazis in the form of making them look a certain way, taking away their identity, and starving them affected Eliezer’s outlook on life. During the Holocaust, the Germans made all the Jews look a certain way and all look the same. In the novel Night by Elie Wiesel, it states, “Every Jew had to wear the yellow star (pg. 11).” All the Jews were required to wear a yellow star on their clothing to indicate that they were now considered objects. Another piece of evidence states, “Their clippers tore out our hair, shaved every hair on our bodies (pg. 35).” Eliezer and all the other Jews had to get shaved in order for them to all
Elie and all the other Jews were stripped of their identity.When the Germans first came to Elie’s home in Sighet, they have tattooed a star on their arms as a sign that they are different and jewish. Elie no longer was
Throughout the story Night, Eliezer, his father, and many other Jews are treated as inferior to the point where they are not even considered humans. This term is known as dehumanization and is used by the Nazis during the course of the story. In chapter two, the Jews are thrown into cattle cars as a form of transportation. The Jews are nearly squeezed to death and treated like animals. Whenever the Jews first arrive at the camps, their identities are completely wiped, they are just referred to as numbers and letters.
How are the Jews of Sighet truly dehumanized in the Night book, written by Elie Wiesel during WW2? The Night book tells the story of a father and son who were forced out of their home and separated from their loved ones by the Germans during WW2. The family was sent to a labor camp where they struggled to survive. Eliezer and the other Jews are consistently punished, treated as animals, and stripped of their identity. This not only diminished Elie’s sense of self, but also the love of his God.
In the novel Night by Eliezer Wiesel, the theme of dehumanization is present throughout the novels. Dehumanization is the process in which Nazis instilled fear into the Jews so as to make them lose all individuality and hope. The act of dehumanization is very prevalent throughout in which most of them were acts of deindividualization.
Dehumanization is defined as “the process of depriving a person or group of positive human qualities.” As Elie Wiesel describes throughout Night, the holocaust deprived him of all human qualities. After Wiesel’s experiences, he viewed his reflection as a corpse (pg 119); every human aspect of himself was taken away during his time at Auschwitz. At this camp, he and many others were treated as if they were tools for labor, not living beings. As twelve year-old Wiesel begins his journey to Auschwitz, he says that he, along with seventy nine other Jews, were forced into cattle cars.
Khiev 1 Dylan Khiev. Ms. vanSchaik English Per 5 6 March 2024 Night Research Paper What does it feel like to be treated as nothing but a heap of clothes and work? hands.
Stripped of Human Qualities In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, the theme dehumanization of human beings is shown by taking away their name, disrespectful treatment of the deceased, and the harsh beatings of innocent Jews. To begin, after arriving in Auschwitz, stripped of their families, lives and all their identifying possessions, the Germans took the only thing the Jewish people had left. Wiesel describes, “The three ‘veterans,’ with needles in their hands, engraved a number on our left arms. I became A-7713.
What if you had to leave your house and only had 24 hours to leave? Or your identification has to be a number? Or even forced to watch murder. You would feel less human and more like a “thing” right? “Night “ is a memoir of Elie Wiesel published 1956.
Imagine seeing 6 million people in one place. Over the time of the holocaust, over 6 million people were dehumanized to the point of being viewed as animals, this eventually led to their deaths. Elie Weisel, the author of Night, showed some of the dehumanization that the Jews went through with firsthand experiences and thorough stories he was told. In the memoir, Elie shows dehumanization when he talks about the housing of the Jews, the food they were fed, and the way that they were transported. In the memoir, Elie talks about the housing they were kept in repeatedly.
Eliezer's life, before the Holocaust, revolved around his faith because it was all he knew. We discover his devotion early on as so, “I was twelve. I believed
Dehumanization is when someone disposes a person of a quality that makes them unique and human and changes them to fit their needs. In “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Elie writes about the experiences of the Jews from the perspective of Eliezer. Wiesel explained how the Nazi’s changed the way the Jews lived and robbed them of their identity slowly but surely. The process of dehumanizing started when the Jews, including Eliezer, were removed from their homes in Sighet. The Jews were delivered in cattle cars which are used to carry livestock usually to markets, foreshadowing the Jews to be no more than livestock.
The Distasteful and Dissociating Result of Dehumanization Too commonly people forget the animalistic struggles for survival, taking for granted the privilege to worry about ethics and the meaning of one’s life. The once inconceivable loss of morality, dignity, and love creeps upon a person’s ignorance, changing their sentimentalities to burdens within the night. The memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, a narrative following Eliezer Wiesel’s grapple with his mental and physical self, describes the mechanical stripping of his humane pleasures in exchange for his existence. Through Eliezer’s experiences with the Holocaust, Weisel demonstrates how the Nazis conditioned the prisoners to put their values and faith aside to survive, following the order of
Atrocities against a population can strip them of any of the human traits they once possessed. In 1941-1945, the Nazi party of Germany committed unspeakable atrocities towards the Jewish population in east and central Europe. American theologian Robert McAfee Brown describes the Nazi holocaust atrocities, saying that "to be dehumanized in the present [is] removal of world, god, and self” (77). In Elie Wiesel’s novel Night, he tells the story of his experience with this dehumanization. The Nazi dehumanization of the Jewish people eroded Elie's once strong faith into a distrust of God.
How does humanity impact our decisions? How does humanity impact our decisions? In Elie Wiesel's “Night,” it helps the reader relive the experiences of a Jewish teenager during the Holocaust. This piece of work is one of the best illustrations that show how the atrocities of the Holocaust forced the people involved to confront their humanity and morals. Wiesel writes about how surviving is in the face of dehumanization and how it impacts their behaviors and decisions.
In Night, by Elie Wiesel, literary devices are used to create a feeling that you're present and spectating the experiences Elie and his family have gone through. Using literary devices such as repetition and metaphor emphasize the dehumanization the Jews have gone through. The Jews are no longer familiar with themselves when looking at the mirror. All throughout the novel questioning, personification, imagery, and symbolism get used. All of these literary devices have shown the dehumanization that the Jews have gone through.