Hatred, relationships, and conflict are the most important topics in both Night and Hotel Rwanda because in both events there was a conflict due to a strong hatred from one side to another. The relationships between the characters also played a significant role as the characters sacrificed many things for their loved ones and felt anguish for each other throughout both stories. The main characters in both Night and Hotel Rwanda portrayed the story from their own experience and point of view about the genocide and conflict of both devastating events. During the Holocaust and the crisis in Rwanda, the German and Hutu harbored a lot of hate and used extreme and brutal measures to get rid of the jews and tutsis. The themes of anguish, inhumanity …show more content…
These relations among the family and the society inevitably include support, care, love. They look out for each other during hard times. “I could have wept with rage. Having lived through so much, suffered so much, could I leave my father to die now? now, when we could have a good hot bath and lie down?” (Wisel, 105). Ellie and his father’s bond grew stronger throughout their stay at the concentration camp. This is because they only had each other and they were determined to have each other’s backs. The two of them kept each other going. They had endured so much. Therefore, when his father was about to give up after surviving so many hardships and when the war seemed endless, he felt frustrated and helpless because he could not help his father. Paul sent his family away to another country but chose to stay with his people at the hotel (Hotel Rwanda). When the war became too dangerous, and the Hutus were after Paul and when it was too dangerous for his people to hide at the hotel, he made the decision of sending his family to another country via truck for safety. Unknown to his wife when his family departed, he stayed behind. Paul wanted to stay with his family, but his morals and will to help people stay safe made him take the most difficult decision. His actions were a signs of bravery and loyalty, considering he could have easily abandoned the people and fled with his family to
Night is a memoir by Elie Wiesel describing his experience as a victim of the Holocaust. When Wiesel decided to write about his experiences, he was challenged with adequately expressing the terror beyond words. What resulted was a powerful and heavy story that changed how people around the world think about the Holocaust. The numerous motifs throughout the story, like soup and fire, are one of the reasons why this story is so impactful. In fact, motifs are a pivotal aspect of the story, and without them the story would not be as impactful.
Paul’s wife Ellen is affected also by the storm but it various different ways. Ellen is a worrier so the mentality that she has is the opposite of Paul’s, she is always expecting the worst to happen. Ellen is really struggling inside this house everyday. Itis causing her to become desperate-to find any reason to leave the fruitless farm and move to town with her parents. Loneliness is the biggest problem she is facing in the story. The person Ellen needs most is Paul and he, in every way, is failing to meet her needs. Throughout this story she reaches a point where she is at her lowest low, she becomes depressed. The mother instinct inside of her is telling her that the best thing for her baby is to leave the farm so he can have a future and maintain his healthy state but the voices in her head become to much when she finally decided to flee the house with the child. She is tired of being alone and the desperate longing takes over her mind and therefore forcing her to make decisions that are not in the best interest of her or her son. She is out of her right mind.
Evidence from Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs shows how people need to have certain things to have the ability to do other things. The basis of someone's life begins at Physiological needs, everyone needs food, and water, the basic needs of survival. Then they need to feel safe in their environment and to be in relative comfort. Without these two main base layers a human tends not to be able to care for others let alone themselves. During the Holocaust when these things are taken away from all of these people they begin to lose the ability to care for other people and being only to think about themselves. Which is evident when Ellie explains how he would be better off without his father, or at least begins to think that
The themes of justice, community and sacrifice in The Crucible are universal and can be identified in many modern events in history, including the Rwanda Genocide. The genocide in Rwanda and The Salem Witch Hunts in The Crucible have many striking similarities, primarily these are: the hunting down and killing of a group of people identified as being different, the mass killing of people for no valid reason and the taking of revenge on a whole group of people for the acts of one or more individuals of that group.
Night starts out with the normal life of teenage Elie Wiesel, a Jew in Sighet, Hungary. He studies the Torah and the Kabbalah, two Jewish texts. Then the Nazis take over Hungary and enforce their anti-Semitic laws. The laws get more and more restrictive on the Jews. Eventually all the Jews in Sighet are forced into small and cramped ghettos. Soon after they were put in the ghettos they began to be put in cattle cars and shipped off on a long journey to a location unknown by Elie and his fellow Jews. After numerous days in the cattle cars the group of Jews arrive at Birkenau, the entrance to Auschwitz. They go through a selection and the men are separated from the women and Elie’s family is split up. Then they were shaved, and cleaned, and stripped of everything they own, even their humanity in the eyes of the Nazis. Elie is left with only his father and his determination to survive.
Over ten million people died during the Holocaust, and over six million of them were Jewish. The book Night, is about Elie Wiesel, a Romanian child that was taken to a concentration camp. In the camp, Wiesel and his dad are separated from his mom and sister. In the book, many themes are used such as humanity. The prisoners slowly lose humanity in the camp and it is necessary for them to survive incidents such as fighting for bread, risking their lives for soup, and beating up people.
Night is an non fiction, dramatic book that tells the horrors of the nazi death camps all around Europe. The book is an autobiographical account of what happened, so the main character is the author. The author is Elie Wiesel who was only 14 year old when Nazi Germany came through his town of Sighet, Transylvania. This is story is set between the years of 1944 and 1945. Elie and his family of 4 are optimistic when Germany begins to take power. Germany invades Hungary, then arrives in Elie’s town. The Nazi’s begin to take over the Jews by limiting their freedom. Jews are eventually deported. The Jewish people are crowded into wagons where they are shipped to Auschwitz. He is separated from his mother and sister. Over the course of the book,
Another similarity is that the Jews and Tutsis were transported in crowded wagons or cattle cars. There was a horrific experience in Night when the Jews had to fit 80-100 people in the cattle cars with temperatures ranging from below zero degrees in the winter, and up to 108 degrees in the summer. Not only did they have to deal with the weather, they also had little to no room to use the restroom and had to go in the corner of the wagon to relieve themselves. When Elie stated, “The doors were nailed up; the way back was finally cut off. The world was a cattle wagon hermetically sealed” (Wiesel 24)., he was explaining the prison like life he had to live for approximately two years. In Hotel Rwanda, Paul sends his wife, kids, and some Tutsis to escape from Rwanda in the back of a truck. He thinks it is the best decisions for his family. However, when a pack of Hutus approach the truck, they find out that the Tutsis are in the back of it and states to Tatianna (Paul's wife), “What is your name? Move! Get out or I'll shoot you.”Tatianna cannot think or control her emotions whatsoever when her and her children are trapped in a wagon with approximately eighty other Tutsis. Even though it is not as tightly packed as the Holocaust cattle cars, the Jews and the Tutsis both experienced the same trauma of dealing with the enormous amount of people in a tight space, leaving family members behind, and the many experiences of almost getting murdered. They
Night is a first-hand account of life for Elie Wiesel as a young Jewish teenage boy living in Hungary and eventually sent to Auschwitz with his family. The moment his family exits the cattle car the horror of Auschwitz sets in. His mother and sisters become separated from him and his father immediately, their fate sealed. Elie stays with his father and right away a stranger is giving them tips on how to survive and stay together. Immediately told to lie about their ages, making Elie a little older, and his father a little younger. This lie may have been the only chance they had to stay together, so they follow the stranger’s advice and pass by the first peril and housed together.
To begin with, both novels show very strong themes of prejudice throughout. Night begins with the Elie Wiesel’s account of what it was like to live through Hitler’s final solution to rid Europe of the Jewish population. He remembers what it was like to be a young man living in Sighet, Transylvania when the Nazis moved in, and forced him out of his home to concentration camps where many people were killed in the crematoria upon arrival. Throughout Wiesel’s time in Auschwitz and Buchenwald, he had been separated from his mother and sisters, watched his friends die, and lived everyday in fear of death. The prisoners of these concentrations camps were stripped of their identity by only being referred to as their tattooed number, they were
The Holocaust is over and has been for about sixty years, so why are we still talking about it? Why is it still relevant in our world today? The world should have learned from its mistakes, but the sad part is that we did not. No, Hitler is no longer killing millions of innocent men, women, and children, but we are still just still just as cruel only in different ways. Night is Elie Wiesel’s factual account of his experiences in the holocaust. He brings us to a world in which not many people want to go. He tells us the true story of what really happened in Nazi concentration camps. Elie Wiesel, a holocaust survivor chooses to tell his story and begins to teach an entire generation the dangers of ignorance and hatred.
The Holocaust was a time of great suffering and inhumanity. The novel Night, which took place during this time, was written by Elie Wiesel and talks about his teen self-experiencing the concentration camps of Auschwitz. This is related to the movie The Boy in the Striped Pajamas which is the story of a young German boy named Bruno who befriends a Jewish boy in a concentration camp. The many similarities and differences between the movie The Boy in the Striped Pajamas and the novel Night include their many themes of “inhumanity” and “guilt and inaction”, and the two also share and differ in the loss of innocence of the characters and how they develop in each medium.
Yet another example of the brutalization and dehumanization of the soldiers caused by the war occurs during Paul’s leave. On leave, Paul decides to visit his hometown. While there, he finds it difficult to discuss the war and his experiences with anyone. Furthermore, Paul struggles to fit in at home: “I breathe deeply and say over to myself:– ‘You are at home, you are at home.’ But a sense of strangeness will not leave me; I cannot feel at home amongst these things. There is my mother, there is my sister, there my case of butterflies, and there the mahogany piano – but I am not myself there. There is a distance, a
Does the Genocide in Rwanda have a singular cause? I do not believe so; the cause of genocide in Rwanda in 1994 was due to years of built up hatred between the Tutsis and the Hutus along with many other occurrences. The Rwandan Genocide is no exception with many variables contributing to the horrific events that took place. According to the documentary Ghosts of Rwanda, in 1994, Rwanda experienced a premeditated, systematic and state sponsored genocide with the aim of exterminating those who were ethnically identifiable as Tutsi. Between 500,000 and 800,000 people were killed in a period of 100 days, with around 77 percent of the population registered as Tutsi being murdered.
The continent of Africa has been continually engaged in civil, tribal and cross national conflicts from colonial independence up until present day. What historians regard as the most ‘efficient genocide’ in history, occurred in a mere 100 days in the small central African country of Rwanda. The Hutus and the Tutsis, two ethnic groups within Rwanda, have been at continual unrest for the past half a century. During the 100 day massacre of 1994, a murder occurred every two seconds; resulting in 18% of the Tutsi population being killed. A decade after the war, in 2004, the film Hotel Rwanda was released. The film followed the story of a Hutu man; Paul Rusesabagina as he housed over 1200 Tutsi refugees in his hotel. The Hotel De Milles