When put in horrific and extreme situations, people are often transformed into completely different individuals. In Elie Wiesel’s Night, he describes his experiences at multiple different concentration camps throughout northern Europe. Elie was forcibly taken away from his home and put in inhumane and horrible conditions during WW2 and lived to tell the tale with his award-winning memoir. With every day in the horrible concentration camps, Elie slips further away from his true character. He becomes dull and numb, and by the end of the story, he walks out a completely different person, both physically and mentally. At the beginning of the memoir, Wiesel is still living in his home and has no idea of the horrors that await him in the concentration camps. At this time, he is very religious and spiritual, and that’s what he devotes most of his time to. He is always wanting to learn more about his religion even though his father was (somewhat) against it. Wiesel states that “By day I studied Talmud and by night I would run to the synagogue to weep over the destruction of the Temple” (3). At the time, he couldn’t get away from his religious practices; it meant …show more content…
Not only had he turned against it, but he even blamed his God for everything that had happened to him and the Jews. He had grown dark and was almost indifferent to all of the death and suffering around him. Towards the end of the book, after a long run in the cold snow where many perished, the Jews were being put on a train and sent to a new camp. “‘Throw out all the dead! Outside, all the corpses’ The living were glad. They would have more room” (Wiesel 99). Eliezer had even found it a positive thing that many had died. It would give them more room on the train. These pieces of evidence from the text show Eliezer’s transformation due to his difficult times in the concentration
From being a normal kid, to almost being burned alive, Elie Wiesel’s Night is a story about a boy’s time in a concentration camp. Elie is faced with many scarring challenges, and some have changed him. These events were In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, the main character Elie, is affected by the harrowing events in the book because he was mentally, spiritually, and physically harmed during his time at Auschwitz To start, Elie was changed mentally in the book. There were many events that caused Elie’s mental state to deteriorate, including the event where Elie was deported in the cattle car. He describes on page 24 that his world from then on as “being in a hermetically sealed cattle car.’’
Elie Wiesel was a twelve year old boy who just wanted to learn about ‘The secrets of the Jewish Mysticism, but ended up getting a world of hurt instead in the upcoming years of his life.
“Quote goes here” Night is a book about Elie Wiesel and his experience in the Holocaust. It starts from right before it happened and takes you through his life, up until he was liberated by Americans. He was taken through many traumatic events, and watched his fellow Jews succumb to the terrors and reduce themselves to a more primitive state. There are many times where Elie experienced traumatic events, including the entirety of the holocaust. However, while he should have become, and in fact came dangerously close to becoming, a “brute”, he managed to escape this tragic fate. This resulted in his own, sane, survival.
One of the horrific moments that Eliezer went through is the time the small boy got hung and it took half an hour for him to die. “But the third rope was still moving: the child, too light, was still breathing… And so remained for more than half an hour…” (Weisel 65) This changed him a lot because he knew how brutal the world could be. It was also when he, along with quite a few others, started to lose faith in God. “Where is merciful God, where is He?... For God’s sake, where is God?... Where He is? This is where--hanging here from this gallows…” (Weisel 64,65) These things are said by other random Jews who are watching the scene of the hanging of the little boy. These people are losing faith in God because they are blaming Him for not being merciful on the Jews and the little boy. This is one of the most important parts of the change that Eliezer goes through. Sometimes, he doesn’t realize he has changed until he sees the change in himself.
In the text, ‘Night’, Elie survives because he keeps alive the hope of survival. An example of this is when he lies about his age and his occupation. “’I’m eighteen’. My voice was trembling” (page 33), this quote is evidence that Elie lied about his age so he does not get thrown into the crematorium, for being too young. Another example of Elie keeping the hope of survival alive is when he outcasts his father and decides to eat his rations. Elie does this because he knows that his father is sick and dying and he cannot help him besides watching him slowly die. Because of this his father has become a burden for Elie, lowing his chances of survival, and when Elie’s father dies Elie feels free from that burden. “And deep inside me, if I could have searched the recesses of my feeble conscience, I might have found something like: Free at last!” (Page 112), this quote evidence
Before Wiesel traveled to this gruesome death camp, he showed an abundance of positive traits. Some of these being his love for his religion, his strong hope for his future, and his powerful, loving family. In the first few pages Elie confesses his love for his religion and his ambition to pursue it to a teacher of the Jewish religion. He says that “...I told him how unhappy I was not to be able to find in Sighet a master to teach me the Zohar…” (5). He was stating that he wanted to branch off of his current religion and learn a new form of it, but he was limited because no one in his area also studied this form of Judaism. We can also learn that he was hopeful because you can tell that he is still trying to learn this other religion. Elie also writes that “Naturally, we refused to be separated” (20). He was speaking about his family in this quote and how he and his sisters had the opportunity to leave their mom and dad so that they could get to a safer place with the family maid. The mother did not want to go, so no one went; Instead they stuck together in the ghettos. They had an immensely strong family bond and it is shown through this passage. The children chose their family over a more certain safety. The next quote came after they were all in cattle carts, and were traveling to the new place. Elie recalls “It was as though madness had infected all of us” (27). Elie was scared during this time, but also reserved. He just kept to himself on while he was in this cart that was heading somewhere that he did not know.
In the novel Night, Elie Wiesel writes about his experience inside the concentration camps of Germany during World War II. He realizes how his humanity changes after he is free. Elie ponders about if he can be re-humanized after he passes trials, when he looks at a mirror. Wiesel uses a gloomy tone to reveal how Elie succeeds in survival through dehumanization.
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.
Traumatic and scarring events occur on a daily basis; from house fires to war, these memories are almost impossible to forget. The Holocaust is only one of the millions of traumas that have occurred, yet it is known worldwide for sourcing millions of deaths. Elie Wiesel was among the many victims of the Holocaust, and one of the few survivors. In the memoir, “Night”, by Elie Wiesel, Elie, the main character, is forever changed because of his traumatic experiences in the Auschwitz concentration camps.
In life, people go through different changes when put through difficult experiences. In the book Night, Elie Wiesel is a young Jewish boy whose family is sent to a concentration camp by Nazis. The story focuses on his experiences and trials through the camp. Elie physically becomes more dehumanized and skeletal, mentally changes his perspective on religion, and socially becomes more selfish and detached, causing him to lose many parts of his character and adding to the overall theme of loss in Night.
In “Night” by Elie Wiesel, the main character, Elie, changed as a person because of his experiences at Auschwitz. Throughout his entire journey, his choices became wiser and more strategic. Before entering Auschwitz, Elie was a very weak in the sense of decision making. He did not think ahead or think about the consequences for his actions. However, Elie’s character changed because of his experiences at Auschwitz.
In 2006, Elie Wiesel published the memoir “Night,” which focuses on his terrifying experiences in the Nazi extermination camps during the World War ll. Elie, a sixteen-year-old Jewish boy, is projected as a dynamic character who experiences overpowering conflicts in his emotions. One of his greatest struggles is the sense helplessness that he feels when all the beliefs and rights, of an entire nation, are reduced to silence. Elie and the Jews are subjected daily to uninterrupted torture and dehumanization. During the time spent in the concentration camp, Elie is engulfed by an uninterrupted roar of pain and despair. Throughout this horrific experience, Elie’s soul perishes as he faces constant psychological abuse, inhuman living conditions, and brutal negation of his humanity.
When Elie and his family are sent to a concentration camp, he is fortunate enough to not be separated from his father. At first, this is a relief, and is father is his will to survive. “The idea of dying, of ceasing to be, began to fascinate me. To no longer exist. To no longer feel the excruciating pain of my foot… My father’s presence was the only thing that stopped me. He was running next to me, out of breathe, out of strength, desperate. I had no right to let myself die. What would he do without me? I was his sole support.”(86)
Night by Elie Wiesel remains a shocking and terrifying memoir of a survivor of the Holocaust, the murders of six million Jews and five million Gentiles. Elie, a victim of this dreadful event, was forced to separate from his family, and to miss the life he once had. Elie transformed into a unrecognizable, scarred person by the end of his journey. Elie’s traumatizing experiences in the concentration camps of Auschwitz affected him significantly; he changed both spiritually and in his relationship with his father.
During the Holocaust, Eliezer Wiesel changes from a spiritual, sensitive, little boy to a spiritually dead, dispassionate man. In his memoir, Night, Elie speaks about his experiences upon being a survivor of the Holocaust. The reader sees how Elie has changed through his experiences in Sighet and the ghettos in comparison to what it was like for him in the concentration camps.