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Dehumanization In The Book Night

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Elie Wiesel’s book Night is his record of the terrible experiences he had with the concentration camps during the Holocaust. The Jews were dehumanized by their horrible conditions and how the Nazis treated them and how they viewed them. The Jews’ human rights were completely disregarded to the point where they were not even treated or viewed as people by the Nazis. The Holocaust was one of the worst events ever in history and should be recognized and spread around to make sure a genocide at that scale should never be repeated in history. Wiesel made it his job to be the emissary of the Jews who were killed, broken, and shattered in the camps because of the troubles he experienced firsthand.
Wiesel experienced the worse emotional stress from being too afraid to help his father in the camps during his cries because of the bearings he would get for escaping his quarters. “I remember that night , the most horrendous of my life: “... Eliezer my son, come here… I want to tell you something… Only to you… Come, don’t leave me alone Eliezer…” I heard his voice, grasped the meaning of his words and the tragic dimension of the moment, yet I did not move.” (Elie Wiesel, page XI) If someone were to face the fate of having to choose between comforting a loved one in their …show more content…

Wiesel took this and realized how if he survived and spread the concepts of the Holocaust on a viral level to prevent a similar event from repeating itself then he would be offering a grand amount of help to the world and to future generations. Wiesel responds to the events as a humble ambassador of those who were “silenced” in the camps. Wiesel became an emissary on the behalf of every single Jew who was mentally and spiritually broken, and those who were killed, who never pursued their dreams or were capable of living as normal humans because of the

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