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Elie Wiesel Analysis

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Ranney , Rayanna Strong & Cithlaly Carreon Elie Wiesel was once a part of a normal Jewish family, raised in the town of Sighet, Transylvania. For a meager difference in religious beliefs, he was torn from his home and family, then forced into one of the biggest human inflicted tragedies in history. Family, which once supported him, soon became a burden as he struggled for his own survival. Changes so extreme made himself unrecognizable. Not so much in the physical state, but mentally, in his faith and Humanity. The Reflection in the mirror so foreign like a new species of human. He was left unable to recite the song of his own childhood because the lyrics were stolen from his mouth by the Germans, silenced. Faith turned to skepticism, feeling …show more content…

At some point he had not responded at all towards the cruelties happening around him. Many thought he might of had no feelings or apathy towards losing his family and friends. For example in this section when his father died he said “I did not weep, and it pained me that I could not weep. But I was out of tears. And deep inside me, if I could have searched the recesses of my feeble conscience, I might have found something like: Free at last!...” (Night-Wiesel p.112). He almost saw his father as a burden that manacled him. Elie gave him his ration and had tried to complete his every wish even though he knew his father wouldn’t survive. But he still had this hate and kind of annoyed feeling that all this had gotten to where he took care of his father instead of his father taking care of him. Although he would randomly get this rush of emotions and realization of what he was going through, but still didn’t make it a big scene. Viktor Frankl, on the other hand, had a completely different approach and reaction towards the Holocaust. He had seen the Holocaust as a challenge from God. (Viktor- “Question of God” ) While Elie was losing his trust and faith towards God. Elie’s ways of seeing the Holocaust were at the time understandable, but to people now see it as heartless. But he has grown and has learned to make those times useful. He matured from the Holocaust going in at the age of

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