The Holocaust took place in 1941 in Germany. In total during the Holocaust six million Jews, and five million non Jews lost their lives to the Nazis. One of the nine hundred thousand survivors won the Nobel Peace Prize, and that would be Elie Wiesel. After this terrible tragedy Elie wrote the book Night describing his life as the Holocaust approached his family and the scary way he lost his family and friends to the Holocaust. The Holocaust changed Elie Wiesel in big and small ways, emotionally and his relationship with his father. The nazis starved him, beat him, make him watch horrible things (Such as Death), enslaved him, and all of this torture came to an end on May 5, 1945, when he was rescued by the Americans.
Elie’s experiences changed
The holocaust ended May 8, 1945 but it took the lives of millions of people with it. Depriving millions of innocent souls of basic rights we have today. In the book Night, we are shown the experiences and transformations of young Elie from the day he arrived in the ghetto, to his last day in a concentration camp. As a result of his experiences during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel changes from a religious, sensitive little boy to a spiritually dead, unemotional man.
Luba Frederick, a holocaust survivor, answered “To die was easy.”, when discussing the tragic and horrible events of the holocaust. In the Nazi concentration camps, life was miserable. Jews were oppressed by Nazi’s and forced to do their dirty work. Families, jobs, dreams, were nothing more than an illusion as cruel and inhumane treatment replaced them. People felt hopeless and looked to death as an option. Many were intrigued with the idea of death, since it was easier to give up rather than choosing to continue. Majority of people stopped eating, gave up their religious faiths and hope, welcoming the darkness to embrace them. Surviving was a constant struggle for these people and the only way to overcome it was the acceptance of death.
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel there are many instances where his use of imagery helps establish tone and purpose. For example Elie Wiesel used fire (sight) to represent just that. The fire helps prove that the tone is serious and mature. In no way did Wiesel try to lighten up the story about the concentration camps or the Nazis. His use of fire also helps show his purpose. “Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, that turned my life into one long night seven times scaled. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the small faces of the children whose bodies I saw
Imagine that your life is changed within a few seconds, and you don't know it yet. This is what happens to Elie Wiesel in the book Night. In the book Between Shades of Gray, Ruta Sepetys writes about Lina and her family that goes through a similar situation as Elie Wiesel. Though they were both put through terrible conditions, Lina and Elie survived the traumatic, sad, and harsh conditions.
In the first half of the book Night, Elie Wiesel has changed from a devoted and faithful young boy to the same boy just shifted to a scared boy suffering in a camp. When in the ghetto, Elie and his big sisters were able to go to a safe shelter while Elie's parents and youngest sibling stayed. Elie and his big sisters stayed. Wiesel thinks [“naturally we refused to separate”(20).] Here it is clear that Elie is starting to shift from an innocent boy to a disturbed, tortured young man.
The autobiography Night by Elie Wiesel is about him as a young boy when he spent time in a concentration camp during the Holocaust. Throughout the book it’s easy to see that Elie is slowly changing as a person as the holocaust progresses. At the beginning of the book Elie was just an innocent boy who went to school and had a regular schedule just like any other child. Until one day he fell into the hands of fate and everything changed. Adolf Hitler, leader of the Nazi army hated the Jewish race with a passion and was attempting to wipe them all out and create the “perfect race” of Germans and blonde haired blue eyed North Western Europeans, also called Aryans.
In the memoir Night By Elie Wiesel, was a boy who gives his story of his experience during the Holocaust .The Nazis had complete control over everything like how they could have just taken children and thrown them into a fire and burned them alive. While at the beginning of the story Eliezer's Faith in god was that he believed i the beginning and did not at the end. Therefor, Elie Wiesel faith in god changed throughout the memoir.
Society has changed dramatically in the last 77 years since the start of World War II. From technology to world renowned inspirations, there are a lot of factors to the changes in society. World War II was definitely a critical juncture in working towards world peace. Since then, most of the wounds opened from the Holocaust have healed. Although, times have changed and we have different perspectives on things.
In the novel Night, Elie Wiesel gives an account about his life in a concentration camp. His focus is of course on his obstacles and challenges while in the camp, but his behavior is an example of how human beings respond to life in a concentration camp. The mood, personality, behavior, and obviously physical changes that occur are well documented in this novel. He also shows, as time wears on, how these changes become more profound and all the more appalling. As the reader follows Elie Wiesel’s story, from his home in the ghetto, to his internment at Auschwitz-Birkenau, to his transfer and eventual release at Buchenwald, one can see the impact of these changes first hand.
In the novel Night illustrated by Eliezer Wiesel, he describes the process the jews went through during the Holocaust and turns into a descriptive autobiography on how it changed his life forever. Elie’s total life was demolished in concentration camp and he was transformed into this anesthetic tragedy. Eliezer can no longer feel his mother’s reassurance and nurturing either, not that it would even be enough to soothe him after all he’s seen anymore. He undergoes a major change in the novel when all that he knows and values is destroyed, his faith backfires, and his memories are lost (metaphorically speaking); these are the key attributes that make up a person so without them one can’t even know where to begin.
Throughout a lifetime, people undergo many different identities to discover their true self. Elie Wiesel, the author of the memoir Night, suffered a major event that changed his identity forever. In his experience at the concentration camps during the Holocaust, Elie had to fight to stay alive even during the most resilient moments. This event shaped his life and brought Elie to endure different perspectives in his time in the camps. Eliezer’s identity changed throughout the memoir from faithful, to fearful, to hopeless.
The first activity that I chose to do, was to interview a character in the memoir, Night. The second activity that I choose, was to create a collage that represents the mode and the themes of this memoir. Many themes were portrayed throughout this memoir. The two activities I chose, relate to a variety of themes: the consequences of human judgement, loss of faith in God, father-son relationships, and loss of human freedom.
Is changing your personality a good or bad thing? Many people gained new traits and evolved due to concentration camps. They did this to survive. One of the people that had to change their personality to survive was Elie Wiesel. In “Night” by Elie wiesel, the main character, Elie, changed as a person due to his experiences at Auschwitz.
Setting (time and place): Early 1940s, during World War Two, Holocaust era. starting in Sighet, Transylvania, and moving throughout concentration camps in Europe.
In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie Wiesel is a young boy who struggles to survive after being forced to live in the brutal concentration camp of Auschwitz. In Auschwitz, death and suffering is rampant, but due to compassionate words and actions from others, Elie is able to withstand these severe living conditions and overcome the risk of death in the unforgiving Auschwitz. As shown through the actions and words of characters in Night, compassion, the sympathetic pity for the suffering or misfortune of others is critical to the human experience because it enables humans to empathize with each other, empathizing which allows us to feel the need to assist others which can often be vital for survival.