Night, a memoir by Elie Wiesel, is the story of cruel events being retold. A personal recollection of a nightmare experience brings the reader into the heart of what the Holocaust was for a Jew in 1933 to 1945 . As the story is told, the hatred and evil of the German Nazi’s becomes more and more clear. Dehumanization is the act of reducing Jews to below the human standard, and this was vividly seen in Night. Because of this dehumanization, the Jews were treated accordingly- as less than humans. The cruel acts of the Germans led to this dehumanization of Jews when they shuttled the Jews, trafficked Jewish children, and burned their live bodies. The Jews were not just transported to a destination during their experience. They were shipped like
“I became A-7713, from then on, I had no other name.” The jews were given a number as a label instead of their names. During the holocaust and a repeating occurrence in the book night, many people especially the jews were stripped of their rights and identity. This is dehumanization, depriving a group of positive human qualities. During the years 1938-1945 jews were targeted to be exterminated.
Night- Dehumanization In the memoir “Night” by Elie Wiesel the reader will learn more about the Holocaust. A young boy named Elie Wiesel you Wiesel got separated from his mother and sister. Ellie and his dad almost survived together. Unfortunately his dad died, but elie survived.
In the Holocaust novel Night, Elie Wiesel criticizes the two-faced nature of dehumanization through the style choice of connotations. Initially, as the prisoners were getting dressed to begin the death marches, Elie reveals that the camp resembled a “masquerade”, describing the crowd as “poor clowns, wider than tall. poor creatures whose ghostly faces peeked out from layers of prisoner’s clothes!” (Wiesel, 83). Immediately, the word choice of “masquerade” has connotations of a costume party, where people cosplay to hide their identity through clothes.
Dehumanization is to strip the rights and qualities of a person or people. In the Night, by Elie Wiesel uses tone, imagery and diction to explain how the Jews were punished and how cruel the Nazis were to them. They were stripped of their clothes, forced to work and overworked and stacked like cattle in a slaughter house.
Isabel Allende said “we don’t even know how strong we are until we are forced to bring that hidden strength forward. In times of tragedy, of war, of necessity, people do amazing things. The human capacity for survival and renewal is awesome”. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, . Eliezer and his father are treated beyond human like, they are tortured and treated like a wild animals forced to work till their deaths. Eliezer and his father are dehumanized throughout the whole book Night, and it is up to them and their body’s to see how long they can stand pain.Eliezer and his father did not know what they were about to go through, but they were hoping it wouldn’t be as bad as it seemed. The first few days set the tone for how the rest of their
78 years ago, over seven million people were leading normal lives. They woke up in their beds, interacted with their families and friends, and followed their habitual routine. Those millions of people had something in common - they all followed the Jewish faith. When the Holocaust began, the Jews had to fight for their lives. Some were able to hide, and some fled the country. Many were forced into ghettos and concentration camps. Over six million Jews did not survive this terrible fate. Less than one million survived. Every one of their lives was irreversibly changed. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, it is revealed how dehumanization leads to loss of faith, proven by the aftermath of the Holocaust on its countless victims.
The nazi did many things to make the jews feel less human and more like “things”. One way was they were taken from their home no explanation, no reason just told them to get their belongings. They only gave them 24hr to get a small bag of their belongings. “I have terrible news ; deportation.
In history there is no true justice, just death, in the case of the Holocaust, much death. In Night by Elie Wiesel, Wiesel describes his life of a fourteen year old religious Jewish boy, who was sent to Auschwitz, the largest concentration camp, where he lost both his faith and his family. In 1933, Adolf Hitler began putting Jews and other “despicable” ethnic groups into concentration camps and blaming them for the problems Germany was facing after World War I, then in 1941, Hitler put in place the “Final Solution”, a Nazi plan centered around killing all Jews. Through the atrocities detailed in Night, Elie Wiesel proves the dehumanizing effects of the Holocaust for the victims.
"The past is where you learned the lesson, the future is where you apply the lesson", unknown. The author, Elie Wiesel, is trying to educate and inform the reader about the holocaust. 6 million jews were killed during the holocaust. They were either burned in crematoriums or put in gas chambers. Throughout the memoir, Night, Wiesel reveals the theme of dehumanization and how it affected his identity, however still had courage to be a voice for peace.
Throughout the novel, one common theme is dehumanization of the inmates. With Elie’s town, the first act of dehumanization that they were introduced to was the ghettos they were forced into. The entire town was forced into two small areas of land, one four streets big and the other occupying only a few alleyways on the edge of town (Wiesel 11). This shows that the German soldiers didn’t care at all about the needs of human beings, and I think Elie felt at this point that the Jews were treated like a problem to be stuffed away. Multiple times during Elie’s experience, he and the other Jews were referred to as animals. While on the first train ride, a German officer says “’If anyone goes missing, you will all be shot, like dogs’”
Rough Draft The catastrophes taking place in Europe during the late 1940s remains embedded in the minds of average civilians as a result of the dehumanization regarding non-Aryan people. Elie Wiesel, a novelist who won the Nobel Peace Prize, wrote the memoir Night, which signifies the important yet distorted facts of this grueling theme. A series of flashbacks combined with flash forwards draw the horrific images in a way that seems hard to conceive. Throughout the concentration camps, animalistic torture never seems to end, leading to the Jewish people accepting and using dehumanization on a daily basis. The ways in which Nazi soldiers exterminated their innocent prisoners, explains how strongly these men supported the German
Throughout the Holocaust, the severity of the violence increased drastically. By the end of the Holocaust, people were beaten, starved, and pushed to their physical limits. Elie Wiesel experienced these actions first hand. The Jewish were treated more severely by the soldiers and by each other during their marches, convoys, and when they were ill. This was all due to the dehumanization of the Jews.
Have you ever experienced what it is like to see people being hanged and seeing children shot.Elie has experienced the holocaust and he has seen in front of his eyes a kid kill his own father in a train.Jews experienced what it was like to starve to death they were fed stale bread,potato peelings and thin soup.Jews could not receive any medical condition and would be shot if they did not follow orders or if the nazis felt like it.Jews were being forced to be separated from their parents due to the selection process.Jews like elie want people to remember the holocaust so they don't have to go through the torture and suffering like they did.
“I decided to look at myself in the mirror on the opposite wall. I had not seen myself since the ghetto. From the depths of the mirror, a corpse was contemplating me. The look in his eyes as he gazed at me has never left me” (Wiesel 115). Traumatized by his experiences in concentration camps during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel reflects on just how deeply the extreme torture and dehumanization affected him. This feeling of dissociation is common among the survivors of the Holocaust, but this feeling extends to the victims of other genocides. During the same time, a continent away, stood the Chinese citizens within the city of Nanking, China. There, the defenseless Chinese were brutally attacked for six long weeks in a massacre known as the Rape
Dehumanization is the denial of human rights. Night by Elie Wiesel depicts the events that dehumanized the Jews during the holocaust. Hitler dehumanized the Jews by stripping them of their identities, treating them like animals and making them turn on one another.