The book “Night” is a story about a young man named Elie and his story about the holocausts. He had an awful experience trying to make it through all of that. He was fourteen years old; I couldn’t imagine the pain and the things he went through. The Boy in the striped pajamas is a different story of the holocaust.
How Bruno viewed has experience with the holocaust is that he didn’t really know what was going on during this time. He just thought that they were playing a game and that they had to wear pajamas. How Elie experiences the holocaust was different than Bruno’s. He had the worst experience with it than anybody. Getting whipped, losing his whole family getting sick at the end.
The differences of these two are that Bruno doesn’t have to experience the pain Elie has to except for the death part. Another one is that Elie doesn’t die at the end. The similarities of these two are that they both have to do with the holocaust.
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The book night was a good book, I just don’t like the fact that those people would do all of that to the Jews. They are people just like us.
The book Night had a lot more to do with the holocaust; it talked about what the Jews went through and what they had to live and deal with. What they got fed, how much they got fed, the conditions they had to live in, how they didn’t care if you died or not. The movie didn’t talk about all of that. The movie showed us that the Jews weren’t as bad as the people claimed them to be. They were just regular people like us trying to survive. The movie also showed friendship. How Bruno got along well with his buddy on the other side of the
Night, as a memoir is a first-hand experience of the dehumanization and its toll the holocaust had on people. Throughout the memoir, mental, emotional, and physical dehumanization are described through the text. Elie Wiesel, the author who is only an adolescent during this time period, is forced to suffer through all three stages. In the book, he names himself Eliezer and is ripped away from his mother and sisters when they are sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau. He and his father terror-strickenly witnessed mass murders and were innocently dehumanized. Nazis used these tactics to discourage the thought of hope and inject fear into the prisoners. Eliezer slowly began to feel the changes dehumanization was having on him.
The books Night, by Elie Wiesel, and The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, by John Boyne are two intriguing books by themselves. However, when you put them together you gain an improved perspective about the Holocaust. You also get see how people were affected by it, how they reacted to it, and what their opinions were about it. These two books contain many similarities and differences, but they go so well together.
Identity Achievement occurs when someone makes a personal decision or commitment after going through a crisis and exploring his or her option.
In the beginning he was horrified of the things he saw. On his first day at a concentration camp Elie saw babies being thrown into large pits of fire, people being taken to the crematory and Jews being hit and beaten for no reason. As time past and Wiesel was moved from camp to camp he started to only care about his survival and the horrible things done by the Nazi’s became apart of his everyday life.He saw a boy whose face he said looked like the face of an angel being hung. The little boy struggled to breathe for over thirty minutes before the life in his eyes faded away. Wiesel's own father was beaten because he was sick and not given the proper medical care from the nazi’s. Days later his father was taken to the crematory. Instead of Wiesel being sad he was relieved that he no longer had to take care of his father. Elie lost friends family and saw many more being killed. Wiesel was almost numb to the things happening around him.
About two-thirds of Jewish people living in Europe at the time of World War II were killed by Nazis. Elie Wiesel’s novel, Night, is about a teenage boy who was taken with his family to Auschwitz and through many of the other concentration camps. Night walks you through all the horrible and tragic events that Elie and all the other people had to endure. In Night, Elie Wiesel uses several powerful, sad, and horrifying images to demonstrate some of the horrors that occurred during the holocaust.
Everyone knows about the holocaust, but very few people truly understand the damages done and the extent of it. Since a detailed, first person account of the holocaust will teach us about history, Night is the most powerful book on the holocaust. It is the most important book because of its gresome detail, how the holocast got started, and how it shows the complete and total breakdown of a human thorugh the years.
Night is an account of the Holocaust and persecution of the Jewish people, written by Elie Wiesel. Elie Wiesel wrote, “Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky” (Night). Remembering the events of the Holocaust and the atrocities that occurred are a major theme of the book . The events of the Holocaust were unforgettable to Elie Wiesel and even on the first day, he saw children being burned. Throughout the book this is not the only atrocity that he saw.
Night makes me have many emotions towards not only the Nazis but also the people who were being ostracized. In the beginning of the memoir, a boy by the name of Moshe the beadle is taken by the Nazis and by some miracle escapes being hanged. He comes back to his hometown to recall his experiences and what will not only come for him yet again, but what will also come for every Jew in Germany. For some reason nobody believes him and although he begs everybody to leave, no action is taken. The author explains “even I did not believe him. I often sat with him, after services, and listened to his tales, trying to understand his grief. But all I felt was pity”(Wiesel 7). As I was reading, I found myself yelling and getting frustrated at the characters for
In “night” we see how the Jewish people are being oppressed and dehumanized in so many ways. One example is “I became A-7713. From now on, I had no other name” (PG.42). This quote shows how they were stripped of their identities and replaced it with a simple number. As if they were just a number on a sheet of paper. We see in the book how the Nazis only see the Jewish people as numbers and had no knowledge of their actual lives or their identities. They are also given such little amounts of food,
Eli has a definite change emotionally. He thinks about the things he would never consider if he was not in Auschwitz. For example, on page 102, Elie says, “I gave him what was left of my soup, But it was with a heavy heart. I felt that I was giving it up to him against my will.” In the beginning, it was as if Elie would do anything for his father. After all, his father was older and it was Elie’s turn to look after him. After a while, his father seems like almost a burden to him. Elie felt obligated to give him the rest of his food, but if given the choice, he probably would not have given it up easily.
Over ten million people died during the Holocaust, and over six million of them were Jewish. The book Night, is about Elie Wiesel, a Romanian child that was taken to a concentration camp. In the camp, Wiesel and his dad are separated from his mom and sister. In the book, many themes are used such as humanity. The prisoners slowly lose humanity in the camp and it is necessary for them to survive incidents such as fighting for bread, risking their lives for soup, and beating up people.
The Holocaust was a horrible event, one most people hate to think of much less speak of. This event however is the base of young Elie Wiesel’s life and story. The memoir Night by Elie Wiesel is all about his personal journey and place in the telling of the Holocaust. In the book he is sent to Auschwitz as a lamb is sent to the slaughter. He reiterates his transformation during this time, a transformation where he diverts from his Jewish roots and loses his faith in a merciful and Almighty God.
Night by Elie Wiesel focuses on 15 year old Elie’s experiences during the Holocaust. Elie endures circumstances which are so extreme to the point they are almost unbelievable. Elie’s account of his experiences during his life in the concentration camps has taught readers around the world about how to appreciate everything they take for granted, how desperation can make people do crazy things, and the importance of motivation in tough times.
For, in Berlin Bruno has quite a more normal and homely life with friends and family always at his fingertips, and all of his favourite places has, and all of which set in a vibrant and happy city. Whilst his life at Auschwitz is lesser than that, as he is unable to do even half of the things he could back in Berlin, making his time there very bleak to him. These sorts of feelings are felt all throughout the novel through Bruno again and again by his constant repetition of comparison about these locations. We see this setting and theme as being a way to highlight the feelings the Jews must have felt, being moved from their luscious life of being free to the tough and death ridden. Whilst the Germans have all of the riches and pleasure of a normal life, while the Jews are forced into a life of death and pressed labour. We the reader take this on to give further division of the races, making any action to break such a boundary to be very prominent and clear to their meaning.
Night is a novel written from the perspective of a Jewish teenager, about his experiences