Night by Elie Wiesel is the story of a young boy torn from his faith. Elie Wiesel, born into the Jewish faith and grew up during a time of desperation, the Holocaust. Elie survives through the blinding persistence of love in an abyss of despair. He and his father had been forced to run 12 kilometers in the freezing cold, they wanted to quit but hung on for the each other. “My father's persistence was the only thing that stopped me. He was running next to me, out of breath, out of strength, desperate” (Wiesel 86). This shows the blind strength found in our loved ones, they push our limits. Auschwitz Block 17 was hell, everyone losing their minds. “I was nothing but a body. Perhaps even less; a famished stomach. The stomach alone was measuring
Nearing the end of their arduous journey, the mutual dependence was slowly dwindling as Elie began to have to take care of his father. One example of this is when his father was sick and in the camp infirmary and had not been fed so Elie “gave him what was left of [his] soup. But [his] heart was heavy. [He] was aware that [he] was doing it grudgingly,’ (107). Being that he did this grudgingly, the reader is shown that, to Elie, taking care of his father had become more of an unwanted task rather than a kind action coming from his heart. Elie begins to see his own father as a thorn in his side much rather than his source support. His father is no longer there as a person who will provide motivation to survive but now instead a burden. In another instance, still in the infirmary, when his father pleaded for water and the officer came to silence him, Elie states, “ I didn’t move.
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel there are many instances where his use of imagery helps establish tone and purpose. For example Elie Wiesel used fire (sight) to represent just that. The fire helps prove that the tone is serious and mature. In no way did Wiesel try to lighten up the story about the concentration camps or the Nazis. His use of fire also helps show his purpose. “Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, that turned my life into one long night seven times scaled. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the small faces of the children whose bodies I saw
In the excerpt above, the word "night" is repeated multiple times, giving off a negative connotation. The authors reuse of the word, and placement of the word makes it seem as if their lives are never truly ending, like they keep have last days but they are never truly the last days. I think that the author used "night" as the tittle because it conveys the message of how dark the situation really is. It gives off this vibe that the things he went through were dark, harsh, scary, and that no one knew what was coming next. In all after reading the book you get the idea that night sort of symbolizes a new beginning that could possibly bring on a slightly worse life than that of the one they are ending.
A little over 70 years ago, Elie Wiesel survived a situation that many people could not even fathom. In 1944, Elie and his family were brought to Auschwitz where he nearly experienced death many times.
During Elie Wiesel’s book there seemed to be many mixed emotions throughout the situation of being in the camp and the separation of their family, and along with the relationship between him and his father. In the beginning of the book Elie thought that his father could care less about him and what he does since he always seemed to be busy and had no time for his wife or his children. “My father was a cultured man, rather unsentimental, He rarely displayed his feelings, not even within his family, and was more involved with the welfare of others than with that of his own kin” (Wiesel, 4). In the middle of the book things started to change, the both of them tried their hardest to stay together and to never be separated apart no matter what circumstances stood by “We’ll take turns. I’ll watch over you and you’ll watch over me” (Wiesel, 89).
Have you ever imagined being stranded in a concentration camp left to suffer, in the book ‘Night’ by Elie Wiesel depicts the harsh life a teenager and his father from the Jewish community goes through during World War II. It illustrates all the sufferings and troubles the teenager, Elie passed through while with his father at their homeland and after being taken by the German soldiers to work in the camps. The once happy loving family of four children is separated by the World war and Elie chooses to remain with his father throughout the cruelties. In the book ‘Night’, Elie Wiesel uses foreshadowing, imagery, and tone to illustrate all of the horrors that he encountered while his time at the concentration camps.
Strong bonds built upon trust and dependability can last a lifetime, especially through strenuous moments when the integrity of a bond is the only thing that can be counted on to get through those situations. In Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, he writes about his life spent in the concentration camps, while explaining the experiences and struggles that he went through. However, not everything during that period was completely unbearable for Wiesel. When Wiesel arrived at the first camp, Birkenau, the fear instilled in him and the loneliness he would have felt forced him to form a stronger attachment to his father. That dependence towards his father gave Wiesel a reason to keep on living. In turn, his father was able to support Wiesel and make the experiences in the camps a bit more manageable.
In the novel Night, Elie Weisel's purpose of writing this story is to ensure that anything relatively close to the Holocaust never happens again. The fact that Night was written about Elie Weisel establishes credibility. Elie Weisel was born in Hungary in 1928 and was then deported with his family to Auschwitz as a young boy. Elie wrote Night as a memoir of his experiences. This affects the readers by showing the novel is based on a true story which gives the readers a reason to trust and listen to what the author is trying to say. The author uses pathos in his writing as another way to reach his audience. Towards the end of the novel Elie "...wanted to see myself in the mirror hanging on the opposite wall. I had not seen myself since the ghetto.
Subsequently, sometimes people can't control their emotions when they have to survive. In other cases, people want to die since they can't feel anymore, and they just lose hope. In "Night", Elie didn't want his father to rest and die, and his father couldn't control his emotions. "Father!" I howled. "Father! Get up! Right now! You will kill yourself..." And I grabbed his arm. he continued to moan:"Don't yell my son... Have pity on your old father... Let me rest here a little..." (Wiesel 105). Correspondingly, this quote indicates that Elie didn't want his father to die and his father wanted to die like those dead people in the corpses. Moreover, Auschwitz is a concentration camp and there is no helping one another to survive; it is a survival
And when Wiesel thought about this, he knew that even though his dad were growing weak, he would have never given up on his dad. He even thought to himself “ ‘Oh God’, Master of the Universe, give me the strength never to do what Rabbi Eliahu’s son has done”(Wiesel 91). Not only did his dad helped him through bad times, he helped his dad through his weak points to death. Even according to Jane Elizabeth, that Wiesel saved his father’s life even at risk of his own. With Ted Estess, he said that Wiesel has put everything in his fidelity to his father. Because God broken his covenant with Wiesel, Wiesel did not want to break his relationship with his father. Throughout the text, Eliezer had continuously saved his father no matter the situation
Imagine the worst situation that you can think of. There are people who experienced worse, such as Elie Wiesel, who experienced a living hell at the age of fifteen. Elie Wiesel was a survivor, many others not so fortunate.The book is known as Night, the memoir of Elie Wiesel. He wrote in order to make sure that no one forgets, no one is indifferent, and that no one becomes numb to their own suffering, Wiesel wrote a book describing his experiences in Auschwitz.
“Night” is an autobiographical literature by Elie Wiesel during World War II that explains the tragic events the author went through during that period. In Sighet, Transylvania, everything began in 1941; when Elie Wiesel was just thirteen years old. Elie Wiesel was a religious and devout Jew; he was passionate about studying the Talmud and Kabbalah. Elie was a brother to three sisters and the only son of a Romanian shopkeeper. He found himself a Kabbalah teacher named Moishe the Beadle who was deported on the first transport, but he eventually sneaked out to warn the Jews in Sighet about their fate; no one believed him.
In the short story “Night” by Elie Wiesel, the author tells of his experience of being placed into a jewish ghetto as a young man during World War Two. Wiesel tells of being forced to leave his home with his family and taking what personal belongings he and his family could carry. Elie and his family did not resist the german officers as they were threatened with being shot if they attempted to escape.
American author, Ursula K. Le Guin, once stated, “In our loss of fear we craved the acts of religion, the ceremonies that allow us to admit our helplessness, our dependence on the great forces we do not understand.” Between the timeline of 1933 through 1945, people witnessed the massive genocide of innocents single-handedly conducted by Adolf Hitler. Within the concentration camps implemented by Adolf Hitler, people struggled to survive, and the people who failed to survive, died miserably. While surviving, some resorted to religion in order to fortify their well-being and state of mind. On the contrary, some individuals lost their religion due to their unimaginable experience in the concentration camps. The memoir Night, reminisces Elie
“To forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time.”, said Elie Wiesel the author of night. Elie Wiesel is a holocaust survivor, he went through 5 different concentration camps. He was dehumanized, malnourished, and abused. He lost all his possessions, his family, and his humanity. In Elie Wiesel’s “Night”, the German Army dehumanizes Elie Wiesel and the jewish prisoners by depriving them of family, food, and self esteem.