Being a victim is something many people struggle with each day. Having experiences that can harm or injure one is life changing, and it is usually not for the better. It harms people in mental and physical ways.Victim experiences are scary and usually end up with innocent people dying, living in fear, and remembering all the tragedies. Many people live in fear because of the harsh times they went through. The movie Schindler's List won an Oscar for portraying the events that happen during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel, a holocaust survivor wrote a memoir on his experiences during the camps he was put into and how it changed him. Pearl harbor was a tragic attack on Hawaii that only last two hours, but was extremely devastating. All of these life changing events happen, because one …show more content…
When Elie was at the concentration camps, he had absolutely no say in his life. Elie was put in positions where he had no choice but to follow orders. Elie was a victim of the Holocaust because of the harm he was put through. When his family arrived at the camps the Nazi officers told them "Men to the left! Women to the right!"(Wiesel, 22)He was seperated from his moms and sisters at such a young age, not knowing if he would ever see them again. He had no clothes, and barely and food at this time. Elie was not only a victim because of what happen to him, but what he had to see. Multiple people died each day and there was nothing him or his father could do. In an interview with Oprah, Elie tells her that they had to adjust to death from how often it happen. Along with the book Night, Schindler's list also represents the events that took place during the Holocaust. This movie shows how the Jews were always targeted as victims. The Jews were always being taunted during the holocaust. Schindler himself used to the jew as cheap labor so he could make money off of them. The jews were constantly being told that work would set them free,
The Holocaust was a very terrible time in history over six million Jews perished in concentration camps. Even though in every tragedy there are survivors. Elie Wiesel was a little boy when all of this happened. He experienced all of the terrible things that happened during this time frame. While suffering in the terrible condition of the camp Elie and his father’s relationship goes through a drastic change.
Not only did the Nazi kill many of Elie Wiesel fellow Jews they had to dehumanized them first. In the book Night, Elie had to watch many people close to him suffer and die. That was only a little part of the dehumanization brought on by the Nazi. It began when, Elie was just a teenager when his hometown of Sighet was taken over by the Nazi’s. It continued with him and his family being forced to live in ghettos before he was moved to concentration camps. All of this was just the beginning. Elie had a lot more of thing that were going to happen no person should ever have to go through. Some of those things include having to fight people and loved ones to end hunger or worrying.
The Nazi army dehumanized the Jewish people by depriving them of love. Elie, along with most of the other people in the camps, aren’t really accepted socially by anyone. They weren’t accepted as a person, and no one even knew them by their names; furthermore, they were known by the number they had tattooed on their arms. On page 42, Elie says “I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name.” By having their names taken away, the Jewish people had their social acceptance stripped from them. Also, their families were taken away from them, and they had to do whatever they could to stay with them. As Elie said on page 30, “My hand tightened its grip on my father. All I could think of was not to lose him. Not to remain alone.” By separating the Jews from their families, they lost the love from them. By depriving the jews of social acceptance and their families, they hardly felt any
The Holocaust was one of the most horrific and dehumanizing occurrences that the human race has ever endured. It evolved around cruelty, hatred, death, destruction and prejudice. Thousands of innocent lives were lost in Hitler's attempt to exterminate the Jewish population. He killed thousands of Jews by way of gas chamber, crematorium, and starvation. The people who managed to survive in the concentration camps were those who valued not just their own life but others as well. Elie Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor and author of the novel, Night, expressed his experiences very descriptively throughout his book. When Elie was just fifteen years old his family was shipped off
During the Holocaust many things that occurred in concentration camps caused despair among its prisoners.Mr. Wiesel tells about the treatment in death camps in his book Night by Elie Wiesel. He faced starvation, physical, and mental abuse. In 1944, Wiesel and his family were deported from Hungary. He lost everything including his family, religion, identity, and faith in humanity. Wiesel and his father were sent to Birkenau where they were held, but were later moved to a different death camp.
Only 37 percent of Jews survived the holocaust. Elie Wiesel was one of the few Jews that survived, and he was only 15 years old when he was sent to his first camp. Elie Wiesel wrote the novel “Night” based on his journey in the holocaust. “Night” is about Elie and how he changed emotionally through drubbings, starving, adversity, and much more in the concentration camps. In the novel “Night” by Elie Wiesel, the main character, Elie, was affected by the events in the book which led to him losing his faith, him having no motivation whatsoever (with the exception of his father), and him giving up on humanity as a whole.
Torture and suffering is a thing happening all around the world that should be stopped. The time of the Holocaust was a taunting, and dark times in the world, where torture and suffering seemed the right thing to do to people. Elie wiesel was a victim of the torture and suffering by the Germans, in his book Night, and spoke up when he survived. In the book ¨Night¨ by Elie Wiesel, the main character, Elie, changes due to the time in the infamous death camp Auschwitz.
The Jews were the only ones who were persecuted during the holocaust. While Elie and his father were in the camp they were persecuted horrifically. When they first got to the (the first camps name) they stayed together everyday and every night. Elie was not going to let his father slip away that easy. Elie’s father did his best to take care of his son but it was very hard. Elie’s father would give him his rations. That is the kind of selfless love a father has for his son. Over the years Elie’s father began to grow weaker and it was an even more difficult time. One time Elie and his father had to lie about their age just so they could live and stay together. If the Jews did not do as they were told they were hit and sometimes even put in the cremation house. The Nazis did not have any sympathy towards the Jews and thats how Hitler liked it. Another type of propaganda used is fear. The Jews feared the Nazis every single day of their lives at the camps. All the Jews did not know when their day was coming, but knew it was coming soon. If some of the Jews were to old to work they were killed and so everyone tried to work as hard as they could no matter what age they were or how they felt. The nazis worked the Jews like dogs day in and day out. Elie feared not only for his life but also for his dads. Elie stuck with his dad till the end and it was well worth
Imagine, losing the part of you that makes you unique, or being treated like you were worth absolutely nothing. Think about losing all that you hold on to: your family, friends, everything that you had. Imagine, being treated like an animal, or barely receiving enough food to live. All of these situations and more is what the Jews went through during the Holocaust. During the period of 1944 - 1945, a man by the name of Elie Wiesel was one of the millions of Jews that were experiencing the wrath of Hitler’s destruction in the form of intense labor and starvation. The novel Night written by the same man, Elie Wiesel, highlights the constant struggle they faced every single day during the war. From the first acts of throwing the Jews into
According to the texts and eyewitness accounts, the Holocaust had horrendous effects on the people who lived through it. During this time Jews were being rounded up and put into concentration camps by order of the German government. Writings and testimonies from survivors of the Holocaust are around even to this day. According to these sources, Holocaust survivors suffered tremendously since they were treated as less than human , they lost loved ones, and were constantly abused.
Schindler's List is one of the most powerful movies of all time. It presents the indelible true story of enigmatic German businessman Oskar Schindler who becomes an unlikely saviour of more than 1100 Jews amid the barbaric Nazi reign. A German Catholic war profiteer, Schindler moved to Krakow in 1939 when Germany overran Poland. There he opens an enamelware factory that, on the advice of his Jewish accountant Itzhak Stern, was staffed by Jews from the nearby forced labour camp at Plaszow. Schindler's factory prospered though his contacts with the Nazi war machine and its local representatives, as well as his deft skill on the black market. Then, somewhere along the way, Schindler's devotion to self-interest was
Therefore Elie shows how the prisoners of the Holocaust went through all different shapes and kinds of cruelty. They were forced to do things that did not want to do and go places they did not want to go because there was a threat of survival. The men and women who were imprisoned in the camp got barely enough food to survive and sometimes when days without any food or water. The cruelty shown by the SS men and women shaped how people thought and acted around
During his time in the concentration camps, Elie’s outlook on life shifted to a very pessimistic attitude, showing emotions and actions including rebellion, forgetfulness of humane treatment, and selfishness. Elie shows rebellion early in the Holocaust at the Solemn Service, a jewish ceremony, by thinking, “Blessed be God’s name? Why, but why would I bless Him? Every fiber in me rebelled” (Wiesel 67). Elie had already shifted his view on his religion and faith in God. After witnessing some of the traumas of the concentration camps, Elie questioned what he did to deserve such treatment. Therefore, he began to rebel against what he had grown up learning and believing. Not only had Elie’s beliefs changed, his lifestyle changed as well. When Elie’s foot swelled, he was sent to the doctor, where they put him “...in a bed with white sheets. I [he] had forgotten that people slept in sheets” (Wiesel 78). Many of the luxuries that Elie may have taken for granted have been stripped of their lives, leaving Elie and the other victims on a thin line between survival and death. By explaining that he forgot about many of these common luxuries, Elie emphasizes the inhumane treatment the victims of the Holocaust were put through on a daily basis.
Cruelty. Faith. Survival. In the memoir, Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie, his family, and other Jews are tricked into concentration camps and made prisoners. Here they are treated cruelly, and struggle to survive. This marks the beginning of the Holocaust for Elie but the end for a endless amount of others. When life was normal, Eli had a strong belief in god but as the conditions become less bearable he starts to question his faith and ultimately loses it.
At the young age of 15, Elie was forcibly moved into a ghetto and soon after taken to a concentration camp. Human minds do not fully develop until a person reaches about 25 years of age. (Sandra Aamodt, Brain Maturity Extends Well Beyond Teen Years, National Public Radio) Comprehending the Holocaust is impossible for anyone, which makes it that much more unimaginable and unbelievable to a child. It is quite simple for one to lose sight of himself when faced with a scene of pure death. It is fair to say that most people will do anything in return to live a while longer with loved ones. Therefore, morals are thrown out the window and traded