“I won’t give you more, more than you can take and I might let you bend, but I won’t let you break.” Elie Wiesel has an unbreakable personality, but he was certainly tested when God put him through the Holocaust with the knowledge that he had the physical and mental strength to get through some miserable times and impact the world with his story. In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, the main character, Elie, experiences great change through his horrific and scarring adventures that he endures at the Auschwitz concentration camp. Before Elie went to Auschwitz, he possessed many positive character traits, such as being curious, responsible, and disciplined. Weitsel writes, “Together we would read over and over again the same pages of the Zohar. Not to know it by heart but to discover the very essence of divinity” (5). Studying with his tutor and mentor was something Elie loves to do. He grew up in a small town as a strict Orthodox Jew. He loves to learn and read about religion, but he longs to gain a deeper understanding of God and spent many hours with his tutor Moishe, which shows his curiosity for knowledge and discovery. Elie also shows great responsibility in these miserable and anxious times. “Go and wake the neighbors, said my father. “They must get ready…” (Weisel,14). His father asks Ellie to go warn the others in the Ghetto that they must pack their belongings and be ready to leave. Elie’s father trusts him and treats him as an adult. He is often asked to help
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.
Before he went to Auschwitz, Elie exhibited many positive character traits. Some positive character traits he exhibited were the qualities of being motivated to succeed, faithful to God, and confident in humanity. “Yes, we even doubted his resolve to exterminate us. Annihilate an entire people? Wipe out a population dispersed throughout so many nations? So many millions of people! By what means? In the middle of the twentieth century!” (Wiesel 8). In this piece of text, Elie states that he
After nearly two years of misery, a young boy finally saw the first ray of hope on the horizon; the Americans had finally arrived, and the Nazis were gone. In his autobiography Night, Elie Wiesel shares his experiences in Auschwitz-Birkenau, one of Hitler’s concentration camps. Wiesel was one of the minority of Jews to survive the Holocaust during World War II. His family did not make it through with him, and this had lasting effects. Wiesel’s identity changed completely during his experiences in Auschwitz; he lost his faith in God and he became indifferent to his survival and the survival of his family members. Despite these hardships, however, he ultimately became a stronger person than he was before.
Elie Wiesel was the protagonist of the memoir Night who overcomes many obstacles while in the Holocaust. Elie was fifteen when he was put in concentration camps. He was separated from his mother and sisters forever; they were immediately sent to the crematoriums. All Elie had was his father who never showed much emotion or affection. Elie lied about his age and said he was older so he could stay with his father as he was advised to by a stranger who was also in the Holocaust. Elie was worked, almost to death, for one year. He also maintained to keep with his father and keep him motivated and hopeful till the very end. Throughout the year he watched his father be beaten, stripped down, and nearly dead. Elie had also been beaten; he had been especially victimized by a “Kapo” named
Survivors of the holocaust will always be affected by the gruesome actions that were done to them. They will often express their feelings through writing, art, and many other ways informing people of the horrible events they went through. As a holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel shares his story in his memoir Night. It takes the readers through his time in the comcenration camps and the brutal reality of what was being done to him and others. Throughout the memoir his writing reflects the experiences that were done to him through his change in diction, syntax, tone, and physical and emotional changes during chapters 1-5 and 6-9.
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.
Elie Wiesel’s short memoir Night recounts his experience surviving the concentration camps during the Holocaust. In the third chapter of the book, he focuses on describing what it was like to arrive at the first concentration camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau, and the process the men had to go through to transform from men into prisoners. In addition to lying about his age and occupation, Wiesel lost his hair, his clothing, his mother and sisters, his name, and most importantly, his faith. Elie Wiesel's use of imagery and diction in Night makes readers understand the true atrocities of the Holocaust.
Suffering. Pain. Misery. Death. All the negative thoughts in human minds, many that we never want to face. Pain can take a toll on you, physically and mentally. Yet, imagine someone facing those hardships in reality, what if it was reality that we never wanted to face; so we pushed it to its limits? Elie Wiesel was one of the many to face this tragic reality in Auschwitz, in the Concentration Camps, during the Holocaust...The pain of the Holocaust, the suffering of being ripped apart from your loved ones, to the mental and physical scars left by not only the S.S officers; but the horrors seen from the eyes of the purest souls. In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Elie opens up the locked chest in his heart to tell us the horrifying experience that brought many to tears, otherwise known as The Concentration Camps and how it completely transformed Elie into a new person.
Elie Wiesel, the author of the novel Night, experienced a slew of changes to both his mental and physical state during the Holocaust. These changes included his religious beliefs, relationships with family and friends and his self-value, all which he documented in the book. Before his life-threatening experience, Elie was a hard working, religious teenager who cared about others. His relationship with his father was not the strongest yet it was not terrible either. The reason for this being, his father was a highly respected man in the community and was often sought out from other families to help them with their problems leaving him little time to forge a relationship with his son.
Elie Wiesel experienced a lot of life changes throughout the memoir “Night” that sculpted him into the man that he is today. During his childhood, before the Holocaust occurred, Elie was described as a nice, innocent, young boy, who enjoyed doing things that every young boy liked to do at that age. His life began to change when the Nazi party took over; Elie experienced things that he had never imagined before. He was separated from his family, was starved and beaten, had his personal identity ripped away through dehumanization, and had to do things that someone his age should never be forced to do. As a result of his experiences during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel changes from a religious, sensitive teenage boy to a spiritually dead, unemotional
In Elie Wiesel's book “ Night” he reveals his experiences and memories during the Holocaust of 1941-1945. Elie Wiesel’s experience was dull, filled with violence and darkness. Elie changes not only emotionally but physically, and spiritually.
In the novel, “Night”, Elie Wiesel is ripped from his childhood and thrown into the horrors of the Holocaust. Elie’s perspective gives us a view into the horrendous truths of the Jew’s treatment in the concentration camp. Throughout his journey from his house, to Auschwitz, to eventually a work camp, Buna; he begins to change mentally. One of the most heartbreaking and disturbing transition is his change in faith and the way he sees a benevolent God.
― Primo Levi Elie Wiesel is the author of the book” Night”. The book night is about a boy Eli and how he survived the fought times in a concentration camp during the holocaust. He had many rough patches the year and a half he was there, but in the end he made it out alive. In the book “night” by Elie Wiesel , the main character,Elie, is affected by the events in the book, because he became immune to death, lost his religion and he was detached from his sympathy.
Imagine a world where people are treated like dogs, what they are given to eat can barely be described as food, and they live in constant fear of their future. This is what Elie Wiesel and millions of other innocent people were faced with during the Holocaust. In Night by Elie Wiesel, he expressed to his readers the terrorizing events that occurred through his time as he moved from one concentration camp to the next. Wiesel detailed the struggle to maintain faith through various Jewish people such as Moishe the Beadle, Akiba Drumer, and himself.
During the holocaust, six million men, women and children were murdered by the nazi regime, a notoriously cruel enemy to the Jewish people. However, the ultimate conflict for Jews was not with the racist political party but instead with themselves and their personal thoughts and feelings. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, the reader is introduced to Elie’s younger self and follows him through the horrors of the holocaust. Though it is easy to assume that the greatest struggle for Elie was to physically survive Auschwitz, it was instead the inner struggle to remain human against Nazi dehumanization. After the Nazis caused Elie to lose the necessary human components of faith, health, dignity and relationship, he found it very difficult to be