Many know about the Holocaust, but few know what really happened. There are people who have shared their horrific story with the rest of the world. In Elie Wiesel’s Book Night he tells of the atrocities he witnessed. The Holocaust serves as an important example of what happens when we don’t help others in need. One of the first things to happen to Elie and his family was psychological torture. He, his family, and the many other Jews with them knew that they would be forced to leave. However, in a sick game, the Nazi’s toyed with the Jews by making them stand and run; the Jews never truly knew when they would be forced to leave their entire lives behind. “We stood, We were counted. We sat down. We got up again. Over and over. We waited impatiently to be taken away. What were they waiting for” (Wiesel 19)? Elie began to hate the Germans and labeled them as “faces of hell and death.” Despite everything happening, Elie felt little sadness. Moments before being taken from his home, Elie gazed at his home and remembered all he did for God, but he felt empty. This was the very beginning of the hell that Elie and many Jews experienced. …show more content…
Many people in these camps saw babies thrown into fires, including Elie. “A truck drew close and unloaded its hold: small children. Babies! Yes, I did see this, with my own eyes … children thrown into the flames” (Wiesel 32). Elie felt like he was in a nightmare. On top of that, he had trouble falling asleep. After Elie was done talking with his Father, he overheard him praising the Almighty father. Elie felt angry at God. He believed there was no reason to praise him with everything that was happening around him. This is one of the most tragic parts of the Holocaust, and demonstrated how inhumane the Germans
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie experiences horrific events at the hands of the Nazi Party. Opposite of what might be expected, rather than be cruel and hate the world, Elie instead takes his experiences and turns them on the positive side. He uses his tragic and horrific experiences to write the book Night and teach the world about what happened during the Holocaust. Elie’s goal was that we all remember and learn from what happened. The end result was that he won the Nobel Peace Prize for this book.
Elie experienced a lot of fear during the Holocaust. He was always scared because there wasn’t really a time when you shouldn’t. They always lived in death the entire time they were in Auschwitz.
However, Wiesel did not just witness these appalling events he was a part of some as well. One of the most heartbreaking things he witnessed was what the Nazis were doing to infants. Wiesel went on the write about the horrors he witnessed while at Auschwitz on page 6 of the book Night: “Infants were tossed into the air and used as targets for machine guns.” Although this was a horrendous scene Wiesel mentioned many more throughout the book. Wiesel had experienced a beating of his own also: “He leapt on me, throwing me down and pulling me up again, his blows growing more and more violent, until I was covered with blood” (Wiesel 50).
Despite his father thinking this was a bad idea he went and did it anyway, Elie felt protected by god and thought nothing bad could ever happen. That was until he was forced out of his one to the horrors of the camp Auzschwitz. “Never shall I forget those flames that consumed my faith forever”(34). The moment that Elie had
During the Holocaust, Elie and his family were captured by Axis and Nazi Forces and were sent to multiple concentration camps. As Elie witnessed the atrocities committed by the Nazis, he struggled with survivor's guilt and guilt for his perceived failure to protect and help his father during their time in concentration camps. Elie experiences guilt for his survival while others around him suffer and die. He struggles with the knowledge that countless innocent people, including friends and family, were subjected to the horrors of the Holocaust and did not survive. This survivor's guilt weighs heavily on him, creating a moral conflict within him and leaving him questioning why he alone survived when so many others did not.
Following the many months after the death of Elie’s father, the liberators made their way into Buchenwald, the camp in which Elie was located, and set all of the prisoners free. As stated by Elie Wiesel, no one thought of revenge or of their hunger, they solely thought of throwing themselves onto the provisions (Wiesel 119). The people who were terrified throughout this entire nightmare, were finally free and did not want to think about the hate that had consumed their captors. After this horrendous journey, Elie was a different man than he was only a year ago. The night had left him scarred mentally and physically.
Throughout the whole story, Elie gives a look into the abuse that he and others would suffer. They would be randomly woken up and beaten and forced to run around in the cold. Or the guards would be unhappy with something that one of the Jews did, and would attack them. It was a constant feeling of fear caused by the possibility of being assaulted. The Nazis forced a mindset of fear onto the Jews.
After he was finally hanged, Elie and the other prisoners were certainly aware that justice in Auschwitz did not exist. Not long after, Elie started to question his faith and his identity. He wondered why God would let such unjust and cruel things happen to his followers. These murders were so dehumanizing that Elie started to question everything he believed. Surviving was the one and only goal that he could hope to achieve.
and Elie hears a voice in his state “Where is He? Here He is-He is hanging here on this gallows....”. This event had a deep impact on Elie himself, as it was an event that caused him to start to doubt and lose his faith, through his time in these camps he was praying and had hope in his god, the god that was always there for him. But as time went on and Elie watched people die around him, innocent people he lost his faith. How could the god he believed so strongly abandon his people like this and leave them to
Once the Jewish people reached the concentration camps, they were typically immediately separated by gender. Women and girls were almost always immediately executed, and boys and men would then go through a “selection” process, where the old, sick, and disabled–those who would be unable to work–were separated from their peers (“Auschwitz”). Wiesel had left his mother and sisters soon after arriving in Auschwitz “in a fraction of a second” with “no time to think” and continued onward with his father in disarray and confusion (29). Those selected to be unfit for work would be killed by being gassed, shot, or thrown into a crematorium to be burned. After witnessing human beings, notably babies, being sent to the crematorium, Wiesel “felt anger rising within”
As the amount of suffering Elie endured continued to escalate, Elie questions why God would allow this to happen, and he feels abandoned by God; left for dead like a corpse in the gallows. Eventually he stopped relying on God to provide him with the strength to overcome his battle with the nazis. and finds his will to keep fighting for himself rather than
At the start, Elie was young, free, and innocent of anything. He did nothing wrong and just lived his life through Judaism. This changed quickly as he began spending his days in Auschwitz. Each day he grew more and more cold and empty. He lost family, religion, hope, or any self pride he had.
The purpose of this memoir is to show how unforgettable and how cruel Hitler was. How it was ingrained into his memory. The scene of the gallows, the hanging of the bodies he witnessed, and how traumatized Wiesel was during that scene in his life. " And from within me, I heard a voice answer: "Where he is? This is where—hanging here from this gallows..."(Night, Elie Wiesel)
In a time of political and religious turmoil in Europe, a young Jewish boy, Elie Wiesel, was living oblivious to the danger all around him. Choosing to ignore reality, Elie continued his extremely religious lifestyle, until on a spring day in 1944, everything changed. The Nazis had made it to Elie's small village and were rounding up all the Jews to be immediately deported to concentration camps. Once there, they were treated with no pity. Elie was separated form his mother and sisters, he only had his father left.
Elie was held captive in concentration camps from 1944-1945. During his time in the concentration camps, he became grateful for what he had, overcame countless obstacles, and more importantly kept fighting until he was free. [The Holocaust is very important to learn about because it can teach you some important life lessons.] You should always be grateful for what you have, no matter what the circumstances are. This lesson can be learned when Elie says, “After my father’s death, nothing could touch me any more”(109).