Change The Holocaust is one of the worst atrocities caused by humans and was responsible for over an estimated 60 million Jewish people. In the memoir Night, published in 1958, Elie Wiesel documents his horrific survival of being imprisoned in one of the largest concentration camps: Auschwitz. He describes being forced out of his own home, arriving at Auschwitz, and surviving throughout the Holocaust. Wiesel writes his memoir Night to show how suffering and tragedy can completely change someone permanently. Elie, being a victim of the Holocaust, reshaped his identity through not only watching terrible acts but being put through them himself. Before the Holocaust, Elie was able to have hobbies and believe in something such as Judaism. He likes to study his …show more content…
Elie says: “I inched my way through the crowd, several SS men rushed to find me, creating such confusion that a number of people were able to switch over to the right-among them my father and I” (96). Here it is clear that Elie knew what he needed to do in that situation and became a brave and unselfish young man. Almost sacrificing himself to save his father and many others from the selection. After Elie has been imprisoned in camp for a while, he finds himself battling the hardships of being imprisoned in the Holocaust. After witnessing countless hangings, including a young boy, “The thousands of people who died daily in Auschwitz and Birkenau, in the crematoria, no longer troubled me” (62). This reveals that through the things Elie has witnessed, he is no longer phased due to such exposure. The countless horrors Elie has seen and experienced during his imprisonment in the concentration camps shaped him into a tough young man, not a soft and sensitive boy. Due to all of the terrible things Elie was put through during his survival of the Holocaust, he was shaped from a devout teenager to a tough and brave young man. When faced with hunger and brutality during his
The holocaust ended May 8, 1945 but it took the lives of millions of people with it. Depriving millions of innocent souls of basic rights we have today. In the book Night, we are shown the experiences and transformations of young Elie from the day he arrived in the ghetto, to his last day in a concentration camp. As a result of his experiences during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel changes from a religious, sensitive little boy to a spiritually dead, unemotional man.
From the time where Elie had to decide to fight for his father’s life, to the time where he questioned his beliefs, Elie has had to make many life-changing decisions. As some of his decisions left negative consequences, some were left a positive outcome. In the end, all the decisions Elie had made in the camps has made his life miserable or at its best. For better or for worse, the events that Elie encountered makes his life unforgettable as realizes there was more to life than he had thought of
In the beginning of the story, Elie was a spoiled, happy, sweet, and innocent child. The concentration camps changed all of that. Before the camps, he was picky about most things. In the camps, he was happy even receiving any food. This really shows the readers that this not only changes a person but that you should be thankful for what you have. Because of camps, it really changed Elie’s personality.
Before Elie went to the concentration camp, Auschwitz, he had many character traits such as innocents , fearful, and unknowing. Elie wrote in the book ¨Night¨ on page (xix), ¨I shall never forget that night the first night at camp...¨ Elie was very afraid as soon as he got to the camp. He didn't know what was in store for him and didn't understand what was going on. His innocents showed threw making it easy to see he didn't know
“ The Holocaust was the mass persecution of Jews in German controlled Europe.” (http://www.factslides.com/s-Auschwitz#) Elie was put in a concentration camp and this changed him in many ways. Elie changed by losing his faith, changing emotionally, and his physical appearance.
Throughout the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel experiences a stark decline in his emotional well-being. Elie being only twelve at the beginning of the night seems unfathomable to many, but this unfortunately is the truth. Elies suffrage extends not only from his physical torment but also his mental health he is repetitively put through turmoils that have affected him for a lifetime, The following quote above provides explicit proof of the lasting effect of his turmoil on page 87 “We had forgotten everything—death, fatigue, our natural needs. Stronger than cold or hunger, stronger than the shots and the desire to die, condemned and wandering, mere numbers, we were the only men on earth.” Elie Weisel's life has been shaped by the turmoil he experienced, his life's mission was shaped by the Holocaust.
Throughout the story elie changes camps. The paragraphs talk about how elie changed in camps many different ways and how he had to march in the death marches many people died but he was lucky to not die. Elie was scared after the holocaust he could never forget those days that he was there. . Elie changed camps which changed him in many ways such as physically, emotionally and spiritually.
Everyone knows about the Holocaust, which caused the death of over six million people. Elie Wiesel, a survivor of this horrible event, explains what he went through in his novel Night. This novel tells of Elie’s terrible experiences during the Holocaust. The Jews were forced to live in terrible conditions that made life unbearable. While the Jews were in the concentration camp, they were dehumanized through starvation, abuse, and taking away their identity.
Towards the end of his story, Elie doesn’t recognize himself anymore and is unaware of the person he has become. Elie’s changes are apparent in many ways meaning physically, emotionally, religiously. His reactions toward his father during his experiences in the camp has changed as well. Elie hasn’t seen himself in a mirror since he left the ghetto. He couldn’t recognize who was staring back at him through the mirror; he saw a frail young boy who had been put through the worst type of suffrage and torture and knew from that day on ......
As we are introduced to our main protagonist Elie, we find that he is an innocent young 12 year old boy who is joyful and devoted to his faith and his family. Since the day the Nazi’s invaded and we see Elie lose
" The Holocaust imprinted a scar on all its prisoners that shall never fade away. Elie is an example of that, along as all those who wrote about their horrid experiences. They make it known to us how they suffered giving us a glimpse into what is was like.. These writings have moved countless people so that now we fight so that the Holocaust can never happen again.
From what the author describes, life at the concentration camp strips the humanity from a person. The upbringing at the camp turns Elie into a different person than the simple Jewish boy. He no longer cares about saving his father he just wants to relieve the responsibility of taking care of him. This makes Elie disregard his father when he needed his help the most because he could only take care of himself. In the short story “I kept saying ‘Help me, help me.’
During his time in the concentration camps, Elie’s outlook on life shifted to a very pessimistic attitude, showing emotions and actions including rebellion, forgetfulness of humane treatment, and selfishness. Elie shows rebellion early in the Holocaust at the Solemn Service, a jewish ceremony, by thinking, “Blessed be God’s name? Why, but why would I bless Him? Every fiber in me rebelled” (Wiesel 67). Elie had already shifted his view on his religion and faith in God. After witnessing some of the traumas of the concentration camps, Elie questioned what he did to deserve such treatment. Therefore, he began to rebel against what he had grown up learning and believing. Not only had Elie’s beliefs changed, his lifestyle changed as well. When Elie’s foot swelled, he was sent to the doctor, where they put him “...in a bed with white sheets. I [he] had forgotten that people slept in sheets” (Wiesel 78). Many of the luxuries that Elie may have taken for granted have been stripped of their lives, leaving Elie and the other victims on a thin line between survival and death. By explaining that he forgot about many of these common luxuries, Elie emphasizes the inhumane treatment the victims of the Holocaust were put through on a daily basis.
Elie experienced many changes, as a person while he was in Auschwitz. Before Elie was sent to Auschwitz, he was just a small naive child that new very little
After 3 weeks at Auschwitz, they get deported to Buna, which is a turning point for the relationship between Elie and Chlomo. The camps influence Elie and give him a crooked mind focused on staying alive and nothing else. This leads to him disregarding his father. This twisted way of thinking, due to the camps, is making Elie cheer during bomb raids at Buna. He states his thoughts “But we were no longer afraid of death, at any rate, not of that death” (57). This shows that he is willing to die to see the camps destroyed. The most horrifying event that demonstrates his twisted mind is when Eliezer pays no heed to his father while he was being repeatedly beat with an iron bar. Eliezer, rather than acting indifferent and showing nothing, actually feels angry with his father. “I was angry at him for not knowing how to avoid Idek’s outbreak” (52). The new lifestyle of the camps affected Elie and his relationship with his father for the worse.