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 …show more content…
This shows that Eliezer focused on his fidelity towards his father not only because God "betrayed" him, but as a way to have a reason to survive. Their great relationship and reliance on each other is even further proven when his father has died. Jane Elizabeth evaluated that Elie's silence, which occurs when his father dies, symbolizes his virtual death. Language is the foundation of human relationships, and is itself bound up in the thought of faith and disbelief. Martin Buber writes that “language...represents communion, communication, and community,” and communication through language depends on faith in shared experiences. Wiesel asserts that the only word that still has meaning at Auschwitz is “furnace," because the smell of burning flesh makes it real. In other words, everything else lost their meanings. After Eliezer's dad died, the only thing that comes about Eliezer's mind was death. There was no faith in God or any reason to live. This identifies the strength of surviving through him saving and helping his father. Martin Buber even explicitly criticizes language being built on communication and human relationships, in which what Eliezer and his dad
Wiesel’s mind set changed greatly from the torment he withstood during this time in his life. Mr. Wiesel applies strong emotions to events that normally others would not, which, for example he stated one page one hundred that while in Aden “Our ship’s passengers amused themselves by throwing coins to the “natives,” who dove to retrieve them. An elegant Parisia lady took great pleasure in this game.” This game made two children fight fiercely, just like the prisoners did when germans threw bread pieces into the wagon they were in. This shows that certain things remind Eliezer of his experience in the holocaust and cause him to have flashbacks which overwhelm him with emotions that most others in his situation would not have. ELiezer’s view on what others do and why also changed. When Rabbi Eliahu came looking for his son, Elie remembered seeing the son abandon the Rabbi while they were running. Eliezer thought it was terrible and prayed that he would never do the same to his father. Then on page one hundred five Elie stated “I knew that I was longer arguing with him but with Death itself, with Death that he had already chosen.” right before he went inside of the block and left his father in the cold to die. When Elie left his father outside, his actions showed that he was like the Rabbi’s son. He wanted to survive and being with someone else was a burden to him and would make his life harder than it already was. These two reasons show that Elie’s mind was changed in major ways during this dark time in history but, something more important was changed
In the novel “Night”, by Elie Wiesel, the Holocaust survivor suggests that when humans are faced with protecting their own mortality, they abandon their morals and values. This can be seen in both the Jewish and German people. The German’s are inhumanely cruel to protect their own jobs and safely by obeying government commands. The Jewish captives lost their morals as they fight to survive the concentration camps. Elie Wiesel encountered many obstacles that made many of his ideals changed drastically for Wiesel which was his loss in humanity throughout the book he explains the many ways he does not see people as people anymore. He also explains how all of his natural human rights were no more during the time in the Holocaust. He had to find a sense of self because he could have easily fallen apart. He could not have done anything different, he knew it was going to end poorly. Silence is a very important and prominent theme in this book as silence represents many key symbols such as. God’s silence: Eliezar questions God’s faith many times throughout this book and wonders how he could just sit there and be silent while people are mass murdering people.
As Elie gets used to his new life in such a hellish state, he realizes that the trusting and faithful child that he once had been had been taken away along with his family and all else that he had ever known. While so many others around him still implore the God of their past to bring them through their suffering, Wiesel reveals to the reader that although he still believes that there is a God, he no longer sees Him as a just and compassionate leader but a cruel and testing spectator.
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.
Elie Wiesel was a Jewish teenager who was sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp in May of 1944. During his time in the prison camps, Wiesel grew very close to his father and became terrified of losing him. This is shown in his memoir, when Elie writes, “My hand tightened its grip on my father. All I could think of was not to lose him” (Wiesel 30). This quote shows how Wiesel hoped, was determined to survive because without him, his father would die.
Wiesel uses the strong connection of Eliezer and his father to portray the importance of family. He illustrates Eliezer as a caring son who displays responsibility over his father. As parents age and begin to have disabilities, it is a child's duty to look after them. In this case, Eliezer's father is old, but his disabilities come from the terrible conditions of the concentration camps. Nevertheless, Eliezer shows solicitude towards him.
At first Wiesel introduces himself as a child who would describe the relationship with his father as not very strong. Wiesel would rather focus his time on learning the Cabbala than to worry about spending time with his father. Wiesel describes his father as “a cultured, rather unsentimental man. There was never any display of emotion, even at home. He was more concerned with others than his own family” (2). The relationship seems abnormally distant compared to most relationships between fathers and their children, and his father barely acknowledges Wiesels’ wants like studying the Cabbala, and instead he tries to drive that desire away rather than support it. Although later in Wiesel’s
He never realized how strong one must be to endure such atrocities, and how faithful one must be to rely on God. Elie lost his ultimate faith in the end, he had lost all his family and saw the unthinkable and even unimaginable with his own eyes. His faith was challenged to the bitter end, and without a church for structure he lost guidance. The novel is very religious, yet it discourages belief in God. Many do not get their beliefs put to the test in such extreme conditions as Elie did, so this leads one to question another's faith. If God is puts one to the test they will either have the strength to survive, or they will fold under pressure and follow the weak to the grave. As the novel progresses, we can see Elie become more and more scarred that he eventually becomes numb to the pain. The fact that Elie even thought of himself as a ‘corpse’ at the end of the memoir, shows that his faith for God is dried up. He believes that he is no longer alive; meaning his personality is theoretically dead, along with his beliefs, which would include his faith for God. In conclusion, Elie Wiesel went from a lively, young boy, to a ‘walking corpse’ from the holocaust. He learned to not feel pain, eventually learned to lose trust in people, and finally
In Elie Wiesel’s memoir Night, Wiesel alludes to the book of Leviticus when he says that his life was “seven times cursed” and to the book of Revelation when he states that he was “seven times sealed.” Wiesel alludes to Leviticus, which describes how God will punish the people who go against his will. He alludes to the book of Leviticus in order to illustrate the atrocities that he had encountered during his days at the concentration camps. The horrid sights that Wiesel saw during his first night at the concentration camp caused him to lose his faith in God. According to Wiesel, due to his abandonment of faith in God, he was harshly punished. The punishments were as severe as the punishments that God threatened to enforce in Leviticus. Later, Wiesel alludes to the text of
We all know the tragedy that happened during the world war 2 with the Jews, during my summer I read about Japanese and Jews living during and after the world war 2 and how their community was like. My point is I want to know how does the internment impact the identity of either Elie or Chizu?
“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.
According to Elie Wiesel, memory is an essential thing that every person needs. Memory is the act of remembering things that have happened to you or those around you in the past that you can recall. You might be able to remember how you felt, what was said, what you heard, and who was there. Memory is very important because it can help people reflect on the past, make sure terrible things don’t happen again, and make sure you don’t forget what truly happened. First of all, in the book Night Elie demonstrates not forgetting things that happened to him and other people so that it won’t happen again.
Eli Wiesel’s novel begins with him describing himself as a vigilant child with a significant interest in religion. Moishe the Beadle, his new acquaintance, guides Eliezer with his wise words concerning the ambitions of God and eventually begins teaching him the Kabballah. The narrator seems confident that Moishe will help him to “enter eternity, into that time when question and answer would become ONE” (5). It is in this particular mindset that Eliezer enters his first concentration camp, and it is then that he begins to question the true workings of his God. On the train ride to the camp, Eliezer is exposed to the hopelessness and anguish that would only increase in the upcoming years. Within a matter of days, this innocent child transforms
Sometimes the strongest connections in life are formed during the worst circumstances. This is exactly what happened during the Holocaust between Elie Wiesel and his Father. In Night, a memoir written by Elie Wiesel, Wiesel recounts the appalling events him and his father were subject to at the hands of the Nazis. Amidst the atrocities happening around them Wiesel develops a bond with his father he never could have achieved without living through one of the lowest points in the world's history. Although Elie Wiesel's relationship with his father is challenged numerous times due to the atrocious events they were succumbed too, in the end this bond is what maintains Wiesel's will to live.
The story of Night, by Elie Wiesel, transpires over a long period of time where the Jews are forced, while against nearly insurmountable odds, to either survive the horrific torture or die. Hope was a constant theme that helped some of them survive, while the absence of it for some caused many of them to die. The knowledge that their loved ones survived had a tremendous impact on how hopeful the Jews were, and they were also inspired by overcoming the daily and deadly challenges that the concentration camps posed; however, those horrible events, like the death of a loved one, ripped the hope from many, only to be diminished further by the emotional and physical hardships of the camps.