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Night Elie Wiesel Quotes

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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

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