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Inhumane In Night By Elie Wiesel

Decent Essays

As one reads the story of the Holocaust through the book Night by Elie Wiesel, one see’s the difference of power between the Germans and the Jews. We see what the Nazis consider humane and inhumane. The Germans made bases in which they put the Jew through infernal pain and torture. The Germans were able to threaten the Jews with death or they could work until you couldn’t work anymore then they death. Everything that the Germans put in the camps were there for a reason, they purposely made the food sparse so that some may die of hunger or that some may rebel and try fight back.But in the end the plan was to get rid of the Jews completely,and luckily the Nazi didn’t fully succeed in exterminating the Jew. But in the end the Nazi killed one-third of the Jew population and one of their most effective methods to get rid of the Jews was was the crematorium.

The crematorium was inhumane and mentally scarring for whoever had to throw the bodies in the flames. When you take a step back and think about it the person who are throwing the dead bodies takes a mental toll on you,because you could see family or friends dead and you would destroy the only thing left that was left of them. As the crematorium gets rid of dead bodies that are turned to ash and they create smoke. And as the …show more content…

I’ll run into the electrified barbed wire. That would be easier than a slow death in the flames”(p.60). The quote depicts the pain in the flame as an extreme amount of pain on a level of torture. They would rather die of electricity rather than feeling the flames that consumed many lives of their nation.Elie felt as he would rather take his own life rather than being sentenced death on the Nazi’s terms. The flames also symbolizes also represents the dedication to their religion and as the Holocaust continued their dedication was put to the test. And as the were tested they would be murdered if they didn’t get rid of their

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