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Traumatic Experiences In Elie Wiesel's Night

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Traumatic experiences leave long-lasting effects on a person. Any experience that is negative can make people question ideas they think as true. Elie Wiesel's memoir dealing the changes and horrors he goes through at Auschwitz are all based on his own personal experiences. In Night, Elie Wiesel details his own horrific experiences in a Concentration camp that force him to change in many different ways including loss of faith, loss of innocence and gains more lovingness/ thoughtfulness.
Elie changes because he loses his faith after felling anger rising in him about God. Elie is not praying because he believes if there is a God than he wouldn’t let this happen. Elie says, "For the first time, I felt anger rising within me. Why should I sanctify his name? The almighty, the external n terrible master of the universe, choose to be silent what was there to tank him for?" (Wiesel ?). Elie says that he is not praying because if "the almighty" God exists he wouldn't let this happen so he "choose to be silent" instead. Eile thinks about if God exists and he is not praying because "what was there to thank him for". He has given up on faith, he does not think a god exists because is there was a god to watch over everyone he would not this happen, a big part of the …show more content…

Elie loses his faith after thinking about how God might not exist because if he does than he would let this ever happen. Elie loses his innocence after seeing the two corpses lying side by side, father and son. Elie kept his thoughtful ness and love because he didn’t want to leave his father to die or for myself to die because if he died than they would do unspeakable thing to his father. He loses a lot of things at Auschwitz including faith, innocence and his father. Many traumatic experiences are bad for ones health and could cause long-term illnesses including

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