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Symbolism In Night By Elie Wiesel

Decent Essays

The book Night by: Elie Wiesel is a book that follows Elie Wiesel’s life during the holocaust. The book describes the tragedy first hand from Elie Wiesel. Elie Wiesel got separated from his mother and sisters and only has his father throughout this tragedy. Throughout all of the chapters in the book Night, Elie Wiesel uses the literary device imagery to describe the theme of horror and despair to the reader. By sharing his experiences in the concentration camps during the holocaust.
At the start of the book Night Elie Wiesel uses imagery to describe how the Germans first take hold of their community. When the Germans had hold of their community they shut down the synagogues and when jews wanted to celebrate their religion they gathered in …show more content…

Throughout the book they had different selections that were designed to weed out the unfit workers from the fit workers. At the first selection they separated the females, children, and elderly from the stronger males. Wiesel describes that when he first left his mother that he never knew that moment was the last time he would see his mother and sisters. “She must be in a labor camp.” (Wiesel 46). They had hollow hope that the rest of their family was still alive. Later in the book Wiesel describes how that when the allied forces bomb the camps that they were in it filled them with joy. “Every bomb that hit filled us with joy, gave us renewed confidence.” (Wiesel 60). At the concentration camps they had executions that they made the whole camp watch as examples of what happens if you try to go against them. But even in death they still hated the Germans. “Long live liberty! My curse on Germany!” (Wiesel 62). Wiesel describes that even the Lagerkapo refused to act as the executioner for the boy that was getting executed. Wiesel had even showed us that every time the next selection comes by the workers that are in the infirmary get killed off. “Leave the infirmary before the next selection!” (Wiesel 78). Near the end of the book Wiesel describes how people

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