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Night Elie Wiesel Analysis

Decent Essays

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

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