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Oppressors In Elie Wiesel's Night

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We’re Not That Different

Imagine that a group of people came up to somebody and started treating that person terribly. These group of people do not treat the person as a normal human being,but instead treats the person as a lower individual. While some may claim that oppressors dehumanize their victims for more dominance, but others claim that they dehumanize their victims for satisfaction. Despite the multiple reasons of why oppressors dehumanize their victims, is that dehumanizing people is still a horrible action. In Elie Wiesel’s novel, Night, there are many scenes where the oppressors dehumanize their victims. There were dozen of moments where the oppressors had dehumanize their victims for many despicable reasons. By many horrible …show more content…

When Elie saw Idek flirting with some polish girl and was caught watching them, he suffered the consequence by getting whipped and was told to tell nobody. This moment proves that the oppressors dehumanize their victims for more dominance over them because as the oppressors strikes fear and punishment against them, it allows them to have more control over them. Such as keeping them from saying a word about something that they weren’t suppose to know. Another example to why the oppressors have more dominance would be that as the story progresses the commanders starts giving out numbers to each individual prisoner to replace their names with. As they gave the jews numbers to replace their names Elie was next in line and was given his number he commented, “I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name”(Wiesel 42). This proves that the oppressors have dominance over their victims because by replacing their names with numbers it’s showing that they aren’t worth anything and should only be following orders from them as servants. As you can see that why oppressors dehumanize their victims for more

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