The holocaust took the lives of six million persons, Jews, Catholics, and homosexuals. Night a memoir by Elie Wiesel was a book about the life as a Jew in the 1940’s. He explains how he suffered during the year that he was there, the camps he was at. The pain that he went thru getting separated from his mother, finding out that her and his sister Tzipora got sent to the crematorium. Life for a Jew in the 1940’s suck. Elie went thru dehumanization because of the way he gets treated in the concentration camps, from getting called dogs to being choosen like cattle.
The first example of dehumanization is when Elie, his father, and seventy eight other Jews get put in the cattle car. The German in charge of the cattle car says, “ ‘If anyone goes missing, you will all be shot like dog’s’ ”(Wiesel 24). The Jews are humans and don't need to be treated like this because there scared and just got out of the ghettos.
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In the camp they are being striped naked, shaved bald. As Elie and the prisoners are told what to do and their clothes are being thrown at them, “... we had ceased to be men”(37). Elie says that they have ceased to be men because of the way that the German officers treat them with anger and no respect. After Elie and the rest of the prisoners are moved into a different barrack, Elie thinks“... the child I am, is being consumed by flames”(37). Everything that Elie knows and hopes form is being thrown away because he believes that he's going to die.
The last example or dehumanization is when the first selection takes place. By Elie’s fourth day here they all stood in front of our tent. we were chosen by kapos “... the way one might choose cattle or merchandise”(49). The prisoners are humans and not someone's property. The SS officers choose them like if they were just an item for them to choose as they
Dehumanization Makes You Show no Emotion Millions of Jews had no emotion when they were getting dehumanized in the concentration camps. Night is a book about Elie Wiesel, a 15 year old Jewish boy who gets taken to Auschwitz. The memoir goes over all of the terrible things Elie experienced at his time in the camp. In Night, Elie Wiesel demonstrates that when being dehumanized, there is zero emotion involved. He shows this when his father is beaten, when he watches other Jews get hung, and when his father dies.
Upon arrival at the concentration camps 75% of people were killed. The memoir Night by Elie Wiesel was a book about his time in the concentration camps during World War One. Elie wrote this book so we could not be quiet about what happened to the jews and so history would not repeat itself. Elie Wiesel used his faith to fight for humanity during the holocaust and the rest of his life.
“Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.” stated by Elie Wiesel. In the book Night Elie Wiesel describes in traumatic details of the year he spent at Auschwitz. In Night, Elie Wiesel reveals the devastating experiences that took place in the death camps.Throughout the novel, examples of dehumanization occur when the many jews are forced to cut their hair, when they are compared to or called dogs, and when they had to throw their friends and family into the crematorium.
During the Holocaust, over millions of innocent people were killed. The book Night by Elie Wiesel shows this. Night is about Elie’s journey through the multiple, near death experiences he went through while he was in the concentration camps in his lifetime. The dehumanization was harsh and horrible and it killed many people during the Holocaust.
In his memoir Night ,Elie Wiesel metaphor to demonstrate that dehumanization ultimately causes severe mental and physical changes in the victim.
The holocaust was a very horrible experience for everyone that got discriminated against, especially the jews. A jew that survived the holocaust named Elie Wiesel wrote a book named “Night” about his life and time in the concentration camps. Throughout the story, he shows many character traits. Elie shows strong determination, loyalty and very religious. He changes drastically throughout the book.
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
In Elie Wiesel’s Night, the Nazi's not only dehumanized the Jews but strip them of everything that defines them in order to control them effortlessly. Dehumanization meaning the process of depriving a person or group of positive human qualities. The Nazi’s enforced this by taking away all of the Jews belongings, separating them from their families, and giving them a tattoo to identify them. Every single day, over 12,000 Jews were killed in concentration camps. At the end of the World War, about 80 million people were killed in total.
When Elie first saw the smoke and smelt the burning of the bodies he was immediately broken. He then began to question God and if he was even there: “Never shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever. Never shall I forget that nocturnal silence which deprived me, for all eternity, of the desire to live” (Weisel 32). Just from the first night Elie had seen and heard all he needed to to pull away from God. He had emotionally been through so much that “the first night in camp, which had turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed” (Weisel 32). What Elie is saying is that from now on his life will be full of darkness and solitude. God is no longer with Elie and he never will
Cruelty can come in many forms and some of them are shown throughout this memoir. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, the cruelty during the Holocaust is described from Elie’s point of view. The Holocaust happened between 1936 and 1945 during World War II. An estimated six million Jews died as a result of the Holocaust. The Holocaust was done by the Germans and more distinctively Nazis, followers of Adolf Hitler. Jews along with many different races, religious groups, and people with mental/physical illnesses were beaten, put to work, killed, and plenty more amid this time period. Elie is fifteen when he starts his journey in Night ; it makes it hard to believe he lived through all the cruelty at such a young age.
In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s book, Tender is the Night, Fitzgerald writes “He was so terrible that he was no longer terrible, only dehumanized”. This idea of how people could become almost unimaginably cruel due to dehumanization corresponds with the Jews experience in the Holocaust. The Holocaust was the ruthless massacre of Jewish people, and other people who were consider to be vermin to the predetermined Aryan race in the 1940s. One holocaust survivor and victim was Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize winner and author of Night. Wiesel was one of the countless people to go through the horrors of the concentration camps, which dehumanized people down to their animalistic nature, an echo of their previous selves. Dehumanization worsens over time
Society was robbed of their humanity and brainwashed into believing that one race was superior. During World War II, brutality became a custom and was used as a tool to instill fear in the lives of millions of Jewish people. Elie Wiesel is the author of the autobiography, Night. Night shows the holocaust through the perspective of Elie Wiesel, a young, jewish boy at the time of the holocaust. The book follows him going to Auschwitz in 1944, and facing trauma during the time of World War II, during the reign of Hitler. Elie Wiesel was affected by the holocaust and transformed not only physically, but mentally due to the suffrage that he endured at the hands of the Nazis, at a time when he felt most vulnerable.
In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel he explains the events and his personal trauma during the Holocaust. Elie explains in his memoir about how Jewish people were treated and dehumanized in different concentration camps. He writes about his personal experience of being a Jew in the 1940’s. Elie gives the readers a first hand experience of what himself, and millions of others went through. Even after experiencing trauma at such a young age Elie Wiesel still felt it was his duty to make sure the Holocaust wasn’t forgotten. He wrote over 40 books in his lifetime so that lives will never be forgotten.
They didn’t have any value to the Nazi’s and they were considered to be only good for work. While Eliezer and his family are forced to sit in a crowded wagon, a German officer tells them “There are eighty of you in this wagon. If anyone is missing, you’ll all be shot, like dogs…” (Wiesel 18). This restrains the Jews from thinking about trying to escape. It shows that the Germans had no respect for them and they thought they weren’t capable of being a good person. When they reach Auschwitz, an SS officer tells the group “Men to the left! Women to the right!” (Wiesel 22). The SS officer treats them as if they are a herd of animals and separates them from their loved ones. Many Jews isolated themselves because of how they were treated, leading them to turn on each
The SS officers would put everyone through selection and only the grown and strong would survive. Truckloads of children “Babies! Yes...children thrown into the pit of flames”(Wiesel 32) and grown men hung for all to see, their bodies waving in the wind like a flag. For those who did survive selection, they lost their names and were tattooed with their new titles “‘A-7713?’ ‘That’s me.’”(Wiesel 51) The Jews were consistently treated like animals by the Nazi’s and if that was not enough, they were also told how worthless they were.