
Hot box cars, moans of anguish and loud cries for help. Like an animal in captivity waiting to be free of this never ending prison. Dehumanization to its finest, Jewish people had to endure this every day. Not only that but being classified,symbolized,organized, polarized, prepared, exterminated and lastly denied. In this autobiography “Night” by Elie Wiesel he explains the day to day torment he had go through and some of his experiences at one of the worst Concentration camp, Auschwitz. Although Wiesel does not use the word “genocide”, his account of his experience shows that it was definitely genocide that he witnessed. Classification and symbolization represent genocide into two stages, which both symbolize a categorizing of a certain class …show more content…
Those are not in order but seem to fit together the best. Dehumanization is when the superior group makes the inferior group feel as if they are worthless, or basically looking down upon them because of who they are. Such as like race,gender,skin color,sexuality. Extermination is when a group in charge systematically murders another group due to their origin or who they are. For example when Weisel compares himself to Cattle. “We must do something. We can’t let them kill us like that, like cattle in a slaughterhouse. We must revolt” ( Weisel 31). He is talking about himself as if he was an animal getting ready to get killed but wanting to fight back. Throughout the book there is tons of extermination going on, but the one that stood out the most was when they Nazis found out that Russians were coming to liberate the camps. They started to panic and announced for the camp to be liquidated. Dozens of blocks of inmates would be evacuated daily, many of them would be killed. They stopped serving bread and soup, and every day thousands of Jews would walk out of those gates and never return. The next two would be organization and preparation. These are both similar in many ways such as when they are getting put into an ordered group they are also being separated and identified out because of their identity. Not only are these often planned out but already known to the inferior
Wiesel can neither justify nor comprehend the inhumane atrocity he endured during his enslavement, however discovers brutality becomes a way of life to outlive the Holocaust.
Such a heinous event that has marked the world and the Jewish religion, Eliezer Wiesel as a young man recalls the story of the horrid occurrences that he went through in the concentration camps. He has been able to express throughout the book changes in himself, changes in his faith, and changes in his decisions as he went through the course
Under the rule of the Nazis, and in the battle between life and death, the caring, courageous, and thoughtful Elie Wiesel recounts his life events in the memoir Night. As a Jewish boy growing up in Sighet, Transylvania during World War II, Wiesel experiences firsthand the cruelty of mankind. The author depicts the unpleasant living conditions contributing to the starvation of the prisoners in the concentration camps and the violence in the struggle to survive. Throughout Wiesel’s writing, there are a variety of literary techniques to describe the horrors he has experienced. Elie Wiesel utilizes figurative language to describe the men and their actions, and he writes a flash-forward to complement the greater ideas about humanity and savagery
The soldiers had taken every part of their humanity by treating the Jews like slaves and animals. It was through this stripping of Wiesel’s humanity that took who he was as a person from his identity. The killing of one’s body and soul can undoubtedly lead to the demolition of a person’s identity. When he is separated from his mother and sisters and sees the horrendous crimes being inflicted upon the Jewish people, Wiesel contemplates suicide as they walk past the flames to which the Jews were thrown.
Throughout Wiesel’s novel, many different types of conflict are mentioned. Whether through Elie’s thoughts or the external difficulties of life in concentration camps, the discussion of such topics elicits an emotional response from many readers. Wiesel is able to discuss his struggle within himself, with others, with his faith, and with the environment around him to create poignant descriptions of the horrors of the Holocaust.
Without a doubt, Wiesel’s change in diction through chapters 1-5 and 6-9 conveys how he felt during the holocaust. During chapters 1-5 he is more descriptive and uses many adjectives to describe the smallest of things, making them seem more significant. He said, "We began to be tortured by thirst" (Wiesel 18) instead of simply saying they got thirsty, he
At first glance, Night, by Eliezer Wiesel does not seem to be an example of deep or emotionally complex literature. It is a tiny book, one hundred pages at the most with a lot of dialogue and short choppy sentences. But in this memoir, Wiesel strings along the events that took him through the Holocaust until they form one of the most riveting, shocking, and grimly realistic tales ever told of history’s most famous horror story. In Night, Wiesel reveals the intense impact that concentration camps had on his life, not through grisly details but in correlation with his lost faith in God and the human conscience.
In the text Night, written by Elie Wiesel, it is a horrific story about how the Nazi’s invaded Wiesel’s hometown of Sighet, Hungry and where taken under German control and sent to many concentration camps. During his time at the concentration camps, Elie and fallow Jews were in harsh and unforgettable conditions and treated severe from the Germans that no one could imagine. There is plenty of evidence which supports that even through many people turned and began to do dreadful things to one another; there were the very few people who stayed calm and gentle within all of the commotion.
There are people crowded, shoulder to shoulder, expecting a shower and to feel water raining down their bodies. Sighs of relief turn into screams of terror as innocent people are gasping for their last breaths of air inside of the gas chamber. This was a daily occurrence for Jewish and other people involved in the Holocaust. This was just one horrific event of many that had happened to women, men and children. Some of the survivors have used their voice to speak out about their own background during their time spent in Auschwitz and other concentration camps. Elie Wiesel, author of the book Night, is one of the many who did so. Wiesel talks about his personal experience and shares his feelings, thoughts and emotions that he went through with others during the Holocaust.
Many themes exist in Night, Elie Wiesel’s nightmarish story of his Holocaust experience. From normal life in a small town to physical abuse in concentration camps, Night chronicles the journey of Wiesel’s teenage years. Neither Wiesel nor any of the Jews in Sighet could have imagined the horrors that would befall them as their lived changed under the Nazi regime. The Jews all lived peaceful, civilized lives before German occupation. Eliezer Wiesel was concerned with mysticism and his father was “more involved with the welfare of others than with that of his own kin” (4). This would change in the coming weeks, as Jews are segregated, sent to camps, and both physically and emotionally abused. These changes and abuse would dehumanize
For years Wiesel witnesses dehumanizing acts brought against him, and when he writes he furthers the dehumanization by describing the actions of the Jews with animalistic metaphors. One example is when Wiesel compares Jews fighting for a piece of bread on the convoy to Buchenwald to animals attacking prey: “Beasts of prey unleashed, animal hate in their eyes.” (101). Wiesel metaphorically compares “beasts” to the Jews, and suggests that the Jews have no only become like animals but become savage and ruthless animals. Since “beasts” have connotations of ruthless and sinister, Wiesel is stating that the Jews have become the worst type of animal one could become. However, the idea of the Jews acting like animals was a Nazi one, and this metaphor came from a Jew. The choice for animals to be Wiesel's vehicle, is exactly what the Nazis do to dehumanize the Jews. So, after years of hearing animalistic remarks, Wiesel internalizes the dehumanizing acts from the Nazis, and how he now sees the Jews as animals as well. The Nazis brainwash Wiesel, so that he know now believes that the Nazis comparing the Jews to animals is accurate. Even years after experiencing the cruel acts, the Nazi’s mental warfare affects Wiesel and convinces him that the Jews truly were animals and not human. Wiesel continues to dehumanize the Jews as he decides to give inhuman things human characteristics with his personification.
The Holocaust was a horrific time period when over six million Jewish people were systematically exterminated by the Nazi government. Throughout this period, the Jews were treated particularly inhumane because the Nazi viewed their ethnicities as a disease to humanity. Dehumanization is a featured theme in Elie Wiesel’s novel about the Holocaust since he demonstrated numerous examples of the severe conditions endured by the Jewish people. The nonfiction story Night by Elie Wiesel focuses on inhumanity and reveals human beings are capable of committing great atrocities and behaving cruelly, when such actions are condoned by society, peer pressure, and ethical beliefs. Elie Wiesel uses literary devices to produce a consistent theme of inhumanity.
In 1944, World War II was close to over, but not for everyone. Six million Jewish people had been taken from their homes and put to the most dehumanizing work in history by being transported to concentration camps to work 12+ hour shifts. With little to no food, complete segregation, and torturous treatment by sadistic guards, this time of life was a literal hell for these Jews. The SS guards stationed there were so brutal, that the prisoners felt constantly in fear for their lives. In the award winning memoir, Night, written by Elie Wiesel, he narrates his experience as a young Jewish boy during the Holocaust. At the concentration camps, they were separated and put to work, not office work, interminable amounts of forced labor, no mistakes, and if so, shot or beaten to death. The Nazis decimated the Jewish population, and in doing so, exposed Hitler’s true intentions and cruelty. Wiesel discloses the radical changes that the Jews undergo, from normal people, with family and friends, into violent, self-centered crazies who look out for no one else and must fight for
In 1944-1945, Elie Wiesel was one of the few survivors to witness the lives during the Holocaust. He was only 15 years old to experience many brutal and harsh treatment between the Jews and the non-Jews. Growing up, Wiesel had faced many prejudice in the concentration camp as a prisoner by the Gestapos and other non-Jew workers. In 1960, Wiesel wanted to share his past experiences from the Holocaust by writing his memoir. In his memoir, Night, Elie Wiesel discusses the theme of Racism. Through his use of atmosphere, tone, and foreshadowing, Wiesel is saying to reader that when one group deems themselves superior to another, they take the humanity away from the lesser groups.
Imagine, losing the part of you that makes you unique, or being treated like you were worth absolutely nothing. Think about losing all that you hold on to: your family, friends, everything that you had. Imagine, being treated like an animal, or barely receiving enough food to live. All of these situations and more is what the Jews went through during the Holocaust. During the period of 1944 - 1945, a man by the name of Elie Wiesel was one of the millions of Jews that were experiencing the wrath of Hitler’s destruction in the form of intense labor and starvation. The novel Night written by the same man, Elie Wiesel, highlights the constant struggle they faced every single day during the war. From the first acts of throwing the Jews into