When humans are surrounded in an endless chasm of darkness, they find it necessary to grasp onto whatever dim hope may be near them. They find it necessary to set their minds onto a mission or action, however feasible or relevant, and turn all thoughts away from death or despair. Light and dark are words commonly thrown about, usually to describe gradients of color. But humans need light in the sense of comfort, a way out, or the promise of salvation. They have to find this light in life, to turn away from the darkness. Whether the light they grasp be a bond with certain people or objects, as in A Long Way Gone and Eliezer Wiesel's life, or even the most improbable ideas of salvation as in The Worlds We Make, humans will keep focused on that light, which keeps minds away from the darkness that could consume them.
During his time in Auschwitz and Buchenwald, Eliezer Wiesel was plunged into the sadness and constant death that was common in concentration camps. Eliezer found solace in living for his father, . Nothing mattered, except for the fact that his father was alive and still with him. After his father died, Eliezer had lost the hope that he focused so desperately on. “I remained in Buchenwald until April 11. I shall not describe my life during that period. It no longer mattered.
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His lieutenant acclimated him and his fellow underage soldiers to death and destruction, convincing them to do exactly what the people they were fighting against were doing; ransacking villages, killing and stealing. “My squad is my family, my gun is my provider, and protector, and my rule is to kill or be killed”(Beah, 116). Ishmael’s mind was focused on doing whatever his lieutenant asked of him, no matter what the costs because he didn’t want to give up. He couldn’t stop, because if he did, and if he let go, there would be only one thing left for him. Death. His squad and his gun had become his light; his
Book Report Katelyn Bourg Foundations of Religion and Faith Ms. Denyer October 24, 2014 Elie Wiesel is a survivor from the holocaust. The book is narrated by himself who is a teenager with a Jewish background. He lived in a town called Siget in Transylvania with his mother, father and his three sisters. The Jewish people had to wear yellow stars .One day the town he lived in was forced to move into ghettos and then eventually moved into small ghettos.
Imagine seeing infants and young children being thrown in the air, and used for target practice. In the book “Night”, Elie Wiesel tells us what he has seen during his time in the holocaust. So many people have heard about the horrible things that happened in the holocaust, imagine going through all the stuff they went through. How would you feel seeing many young children being killed for just being how they were born? Do you think you have been able to do the things Wiesel did i survive?
Ishmael has accept the fact that the war has ruined his enjoyment of meeting new people. Because of him going into villages and being chased out because they believed he was a rebel, Or having to go through other villages because he knew nobody there and he knew what was coming to their village and he did not want to stay had ruined the experience for him until later on in his life. Ishmael's experiences force him to deny his emotional side in order to survive. His flight from RUF attacks on the various villages in Sierra Leone requires him to let go of attachments to family and friends. Although he holds out hope to see his family, he has no choice but to close off himself to the world.
In Night by Elie Wiesel one of the main themes of the story is concentration camps and how to survive the harsh and cruel conditions in which he and many others had to endure. The brutal conditions were forced upon Elie and his family, throughout the story the reader in immersed in a first-hand account of the inhumane circumstances. A concentration camp is a type of prison where large numbers of people who are not soldiers are kept during a war and are usually forced to live in very bad conditions. Elie and his father were sent to numerous concentration camps within the war.
Literary Analysis “Death is not the greatest loss in life. The greatest loss is what dies in us while we live. ”--Norman Cousins Losing something one loves is hard, but losing one's self is worse.
A major theme in this novel is a boy’s loss of innocence in a world he thought was good, and loss of faith in a God he thought just.” This generalization was used to describe the book called “Night”. “Night” is a book written by Elie Wiesel. It tells a true story of a boy’s experience in the holo hast. The boy that went through the horrible experience was Elie Wiesel, the authors, himself.
Another event that was probably his final turn before deciding to become a violent child soldier. In chapter 11, Ishmael has just lost his family and blames Gasemu and tries to kill him, “walked behind Gasemu and locked his neck under my arm. I squeezed him as hard as I could” (Beah 96). this quote demonstrates how Ishmael is willing to kill now for revenge as the quote did not show any hesitation from Ishmael. As shown in the article Child soldiers battle traumas in Congo rehab, it reads, “the children, they go back to their villages and they tell other children carrying a gun is not the way” (Nima).
Eliezer “Elie” Wiesel was born on September 30, 1928 in Sighet, Romania. He lived with his parents Shlomo and Sarah Wiesel and his three sisters Tzipora, Beatrice, and Hilda. Before, Elie and his family were taken to a concentration camp, he did his religious Judaism studies at a yeshiva. In May 1994 when Elie was only 15 years old his family was taken to Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in Poland. Elie and his father were sent Buna Werke, a labor camp that was apart of Auschwitz were he and his father worked in horrible conditions.
Elie Wiesel was born in 1928 in Sighet, Transylvania which is now part of Romania. He was only 15 years old when he was sent to Auschwitz by the Nazis. His mother and is younger sister died, his two older sisters survived. He and his father were later moved to Buchenwald, his father died before the camp was liberated. His mother's grandfather, Reb Dodye Feig, was a very religious Jew, whose influence on Wiesel was deep, and inspired him to pursue studies in the town's College.
Elie Wiesel is a Jewish boy who was taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp with his family. Elie Wiesel lived through the Holocaust and went through emotional and physical changes. Elie Wiesel was separated from his mother and sisters at the concentration camp; he is with his father for the rest of his father 's shortened life. Elie Wiesel watched as his father was beaten by the kapo, Elie witnessed numerous people die throughout his time in the concentration camps. Elie Wiesel and ninety nine plus people were shoved into train carts and taken various places, and were never told where they were going.
Although as noted throughout the story Eliezer had to mature and at one point he became “nothing but a body. Perhaps even less: a famished stomach” (Wiesel 50). This quote helps show the loss of value he had of even himself. The horror of the Holocaust has broken this boy into losing every want but to just simply breathe. He was no longer living a life but was just a shell of himself now breathing.
Eliezer was faithful to God and humane towards his family, but after his brutal experience in the concentration camps, he would become faithless and relentless. Change was shown in Elie’s religious beliefs in
Wiesel is the author of the memoir Night, which mainly focuses on how Hitler’s power and hatred towards Jews make Eliezer and his family’s life miserable. Eliezer is only a teenager when he and his family are forced to leave their home, and they’re sent to various concentration camps where Eliezer has to fight hunger, diseases, and has to take care of his father. Going through various camps has a negative impact on Eliezer 's life, therefore at the end of the book, Eliezer’s father begins to experience Eliezer’s abnormal behavior towards him. In this memoir, Eliezer, his family, and millions of other Jews experience different types of dehumanization in the concentration camps during the World War II.
Elie Wiesel was a teenager that grew up in Sighet, Transylvania, who was taken from his home, along with his family, to a concentration camp in Auschwitz and then later moved to Buchenwald in 1944. In the camps, Elie had to survive the hardships and cruelty of the Holocaust. There were three main things that focused on survival, food, family, and most importantly, faith. Food seems to be the key to survival, but in reality it killed more people than it saved. During an air raid, some cauldrons of soup were left unattended.
Darkness can be a comfortable place for anyone. Without having to look at yourself or have people see you, one may not feel as judged or insecure. Light is revealing. In a bright room, you can’t hide tears, blemishes, or emotions. Blanche, from A Streetcar Named Desire, knows the pain of light all to well.