The Holocaust was a time of suffering for millions of people in Europe. However, no group suffered more than the Jewish people. Elie Wiesel’s Night documents the suffering of himself and the people around him during their time in Nazi camps. Wiesel, throughout the book, describes his own life from his life in Sighet to after he is freed. He is living a relatively normal life, until the threat of the Nazis comes about. The Nazis enter his town and take the citizens to a ghetto, then to Birkenau. From there, he, along with hundreds more, is transported to Auschwitz, the largest concentration camp in Poland. Elie is then forced to march to another camp called Buchenwald, where they are soon liberated a few months after arrival. While in Nazi custody, …show more content…
At the end of the book, when Camp Buchenwald is liberated by the American army, it is shown how badly Elie and the rest of the population’s physical health is. This happened because they are all mechanized by the Nazis to make them subservient and take away any hope of living as they please. The train ride to Birkenau harms everyone’s emotional health as they lose all feeling of compassion for one another aboard the train ride. This is caused by treatment similar to that of animals being sent to a slaughter house. Finally, we see how dehumanization affects an individual’s mental state, specifically in Moishe the Beadle. His deteriorated mental condition is a result of the dehumanization and blood curdling atrocities he witnesses under Nazi custody. Throughout the holocaust, the Nazis use the strategy of dehumanization to break the Jewish spirit and rob people of their humanity. In this way, Elie Wiesel’s novel serves as a way to remember the struggles the Jewish community went through as the Nazis try to turn them into something less than human. By being able to understand the true consequences of dehumanization during the holocaust, it is possible to appreciate the importance of treating people like how they should be treated, regardless of race, religion, or ethnicity. Wiesel’s testimony in his book Night serves as a reminder of the lasting effects of dehumanization, and that people in modern society are now responsible to prevent
Elie, his family, and many others were at gunpoint and being forced to leave their entire lives behind. Everything they built for themselves, just gone. Everyone was forced out of their homes, into cattle cars, and transported to a place that was unimaginable. They were transported to the concentration camp known as Auschwitz. When they arrived, immediately, Elie and his father were separated from Elie’s mother and little sister.
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, the author describes his personal experience of the Holocaust from his teenage years to his liberation from one of the most horrific concentration camps, Auschwitz-Birkenau. The book is a haunting depiction of the atrocities committed by the Nazi regime, bringing to light the horrors of the Holocaust and the inhumane treatment of its victims. The book begins with Wiesel’s life in a small village in Transylvania, where he and his family are forced to move into a ghetto after the Nazis invade. The author narrates the brutal and dehumanizing conditions of life in the ghetto – lack of food, water, and sanitation, overcrowding, and disease.
In the memoir “Night” by Elie Wiesal, Wiesal himself is explaining his story, and personal experiences from the Holocaust of 1933-1945. This event is one of the most unbelievable times in history. Elie tells his story, in hopes that it will prevent history from repeating itself. The Jews went through not just internal hell, but had to live it everyday. They were treated like objects, animals, and nonentities.
It is a common assumption among numerous people in the world that the Holocaust never existed. In fact about half of the world’s population never even heard of the Holocaust. Through the creation of a book called “Night”, Elie Wiesel successfully helped people around the world learn about the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel wanted to show the courage, bravery and guilt of the Jews through this book. Night graphically portrays the malicious and horrific acts in German concentration camps during the Holocaust.
The Nazis dehumanize and mistreat the Jews in the book Night by Elie Weisel. The Nazis use effective tactics to oppress and degrade the Jews. They reduce them to nothing and small beings that had no identity. The Nazis took the Jews from a person to an object without a face and made them feel hidden. The Nazis handled the Jews as though they were less than dirt, less than human.
During the trauma of the concentration camps, Elie changes physically, spiritually, and emotionally. During Elie’s imprisonment by the Nazis, he undergoes a physical transformation. As the Nazis forced them to march Elie wrote, “I had no strength left. The journey had just begun and I already felt weak…”(Wiesel 19).
The degree of anti-semitism that occurred during the Holocaust affected many people, and even caused some to question their belief in God. The setting of Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, details the tragic events that occurred during this time. The setting of the memoir provides an account of a young Jewish boy’s experience as he survived the horrific Nazi death camps, where he witnessed the death of his family and many others. Wiesel uses the setting, mood, and tone to illustrate the emotional and tragic journey of a young Jewish boy during the Holocaust.
For Elie specifically, the loss of his home in Sighet, his first day in Auschwitz, and the punishing route to Buchenwald were all dehumanizing experiences that vastly changed his views on himself and the world around him. To begin, losing his home in Sighet, along with everything he knew, caused Elie to perceive his own identity differently. Next, the horrors the first day of Auschwitz ushered in had caused Elie to see the world in a different, more negative light. Finally, the route to Buchenwald essentially stripped Elie of any hope to survive that he might have had left, even after everything he’d been through. Altogether, it’s hard to discuss painful topics like the Holocaust; it seems it would be easier to ignore them or dismiss the events as a thing of the past.
When he was 15 years old, he and his family were taken to Auschwitz, a concentration camp in Poland. During his time there, he witnessed the brutal treatment of Jews, including forced labor, starvation, and torture. Elie and his father were separated from his mother and sister, who were sent to the gas chambers. Despite the unimaginable horrors he experienced, Elie survived and went on to become a renowned writer and humanitarian, dedicating his life to promoting peace and understanding. Throughout the book, Wiesel describes the inhumane conditions that he and other children were forced to endure, including the long death marches, the cramped and unsanitary living conditions, and the constant threat of violence and death.
When Elie finally arrives at Auschwitz, the sights he sees are horrendous. Immediately he sees “Infants tossed into the air and used as targets for the medicine guns” (Wiesel, Night 6). Elie’s first impression of Buchenwald is infants being brutally murdered. I can’t imagine how terrified he is to continue further into camp. The Germans were extremely insensitive towards the Jews and their feelings.
In Elie Wiesel's memoir Night, Elie focuses on the obstacles and challenges he faces while being persecuted during the Holocaust. The Holocaust was a dark period in human history where millions of innocent lives were lost in the most horrendous ways imaginable. Unsurprisingly, the concept of
The concentration camp caused Elie to lose big parts of what makes people human. He lost his ability to mourn, his ability to care for others, and even his ability to think. After Elie arrived at the concentration camp he said, “The absent no longer entered our thoughts. No one spoke of them—who knows what happened to them?—but their fate was not on our minds. We were incapable of thinking.
This camp was meant to weed out the weak amongst the prisoners. After being in the camp for about a week, Elie and his father were moved to Monowitz, one of the Auschwitz subcamps, where they were sent to work on an electrical line, and (amongst most prisoners) both frequently beaten, usually for trivial or greedy reasons. This camp was meant to break its prisoners, mentally as well as sometimes physically. From being held here, the two were sent to Buchenwald, where Elie suffered the greatest blow to his spirit--he watched his father wither away to nothing, without any means whatsoever to help him. This camp was meant to rid the Nazis of the prisoners they could no longer use--many were on the brink of death, or as in Elie’s case, put in a vegetative state by the horrors they had witnessed (though for him, only after the death of his father).
From the small town of Sighet in Transylvania to the huge concentration camps of Auschwitz. Elie Wiesel, the author and victim of the book Night, the horrifying experience of the Holocaust. Wiesel is a 15 year old Jewish boy who was captured by the Germans or “Nazis” during WWII. He went through an overwhelming amount of trauma, like when he got separated from his mother and sisters and watching his father suffer an unbearable amount of pain that eventually killed him. The fact is, power is a tool that can corrupt itself and others, it can ruin people’s lives and it can do that without people even realizing it.
Elie’s living conditions were awful, he suffered through poverty, dirty clothes, no sleep, and no food. The setting is described as “Comrades, you are now in the concentration camp Auschwitz. Ahead of you lies a long road paved with suffering…” (41). Everything about the concentration camp was dangerous, Elie having to live and work in these conditions was determined by not only him but others around him. If the living conditions weren’t already the worst part of everything, Elie had to also deal with the harsh treatment from the S.S officers.