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Elie Wiesel Biography Essay
Elie Wiesel Biography Elizer Wiesel, Elie for short, was born in Sighet, Romania on September 30th in 1928 to Shlomo and Sarah Wiesel. He had
two older sisters and one younger sister. He was born into a very religious family, starting his religious schooling at the very young age of 3. Though
this widely recognized author, journalist, and social activist is mostly known for his memoir telling of the horrors of the Holocaust it was even during
his childhood he, his family, and his fellow Jewish community faced discrimination and injustices for their religious beliefs. In an interview for
achievement.org he told of how twice a year on holidays such as Christmas and Easter he recalls the "antiā€“Semitic outbursts" and how he and the other
Jewish people were afraid to go outside of fear of being beaten...show more content...
But this was nothing compared to the nightmare soon to come to Elie. Shortly before Elie and his family were to be deported they actually had two
opportunities to attempt to flee to safety. A caretaker of the synagogue named Moshe warned the people of the camps and mass exterminations
happening after escaping himself. The people, including the Wiesel family, brushed it off assuming he was crazy and continued to live their lives.
After hearing more and more of these rumors, Maria, a Christian maid to the Wiesel family, offered to take them to her hut in the mountains to hide
until it was safe but again the family stayed put with their community (www.jewishlibrary.org). In 1944 Elie, only age 15 at the time, and his family
were deported to Auschwitz, a concentration camp in Poland. It was there he saw his mother and younger sister be taken to the gas chamber and
killed. He lied saying he was an 18 year old farmer in good health so he would be kept alive. He and his father survived Auschwitz but on the march to
Buchenwald his father passed from dysentery and starvation. Buchenwald
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Elie Wiesel Writing Style
The Holocaust was a time of death. It was initiated by Adolf Hitler and his German army and was the mass genocide that killed over six million
Jews. Among those were women and children being sent to death right away, the others were then "selected", Elie Wiesel was one of the lucky
ones. He was a survivor who lived to tell about his experience in the death camps. Elie Wiesel wrote the book 'Night' because he felt it was his duty
and responsibility to show readers what really happened during the Holocaust. His writing style effectively develops his point of view so he is able to
convey a compelling storyā€“his story. Death campsā€“A very heart wrenching subject. As a young boy, Elie had to experience the pain and suffering that
was considered "normal" in a concentration camp. Death become just death, people became numb, life went on until one day you couldn't go on
and were then sent to the crematorium. Survival was a huge aspect in the book 'Night'. The daily rations were a piece of stale bread and some soup.
As time went on rations got less and people began to get ravenous. As stated in the text "You're killing your father...I have bread...for you too...for you
too..." (Wiesel 101) The theme of survival relates not to just this book and the Holocaust, but in the real world. It is our humanly instincts to stay
alive. Once that factor kicks in you start to lose sight of what matters in your life, like happiness and relationships. That's why on page 101 the boy
killed his father for just
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Essay Themes in "Night" by Elie Wiesel
THemes 1.) Man's inhumanity to man
Removal of human looks that defined who they are * Same uniform * Cut hair to remove individuality. * "In a few seconds we had ceased to be men"
37 * "I became Aā€“7713. From then on, I had no other name"42
The harshness of the camp quickly transformed them into selfish indifferent people * "I had not even blinked, only yesterday I would have dug my
nails into the criminals flesh" 39 * "you're killing your father"101 * "The old man mumbled something, groaned and died. Nobody cared" 101 * "I
shall never forgive myself. Nor shall I forgive the world for having pushed me against the wall, for having turned me into a stranger, for having
awakened in me the basest, most...show more content...
Without love or mercy. I was nothing but ashes now" 68 * "But as soon as he felt the first chinks in his faith, he lost all incentive to fight and opened
the door to death" 77 * "I have more faith in Hitler than anybody else. He alone has kept his promises, all his promises to the Jewish people." 81 * " I
suffer hell in my soul and in my flesh... how can anybody believe in this God of mercy"
3.) Kindness in adversity
Helping each other out in times of need * Elie's father made sure Elie didn't "fall asleep forever" in the snow despite his exhaustion. Pg 88 * The
French girl risked her life by saying to Elie in almost perfect German, "don't cry. Keep your anger, your hate, for another day, for later. The day will
come but not now... wait. Clench your teeth and wait" * "Elie even gave his dying father extra rations, despite being told to "stop giving your ration of
bread and soup too your old father... in fact you should be getting his rations." * Working through the struggles together see father son relationships Elie
and father * "No. You're eighteen... Not fifty. You're forty. Dou you hear?
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Research Paper On Elie Wiesel
Elie Wiesel
The Holocaust was a terrible, dark time in the 1900s (1933ā€“1945). Many Jewish families were broken up and killed. Elie Wiesel is one of the many
who was saved from dying of starvation. Elie created stories based on his experience in the Auschwitz concentration camp. He used persistence
while in these camps by not losing the will to live. Elie inspired many people to live life to the fullest, (he didn't get to live the perfect life he
probably imagined when he was little) even if you come across problems.
Elie Wiesel was a Holocaust survivor who took in the passion of writing. He not only wrote many books but created awareness of the terrible time in
Germany during World War II. Elie Wiesel wrote the book Night among many others.
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Elie Wiesel's Night
Elie Wiesel was born on September 30, 1928, in Sighet, Transylvania. He grew up with three sisters and had a strong interest in religious studies.
In 1944, Nazis forced Jews who resided in Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania to relocate to labor and death camps in Poland. When Elie was at the
age of 15, he and his entire family were sent to Auschwitz. Elie lived in camps with inhuman conditions and was almost starved to death. He was
eventually freed from Buchenwald in 1945. Out of all of his family members only him and two of his sisters survived. Elie then moved on to become
many great things like a writer which won him a Nobelā€“Prize. He wrote many books including the one i am reading "Night". Elie also taught Judaic
studies at the City University...show more content...
Every year we were assigned to read and do some type of book report and i would never make it through the book because it never kept me
interested. Night is a book i can say that actually kept me interested enough to make it through the whole thing. This book made you feel every
emotion that Elie felt from the weakness, sadness, and the feeling of losing hope. Wiesel wrote the book so detailed even if it was harsh. I think
the things i will remember the most is how descriptive he was while explaining how some of the innocent people would die. Also how they were
put through such harsh things like inhuman labor, harsh travel conditions, and starvation. In my opinion this book was a bit different because at
the end of the book you always expect there to be some type of little happy ending. I can tell you now that if you are into happy endings Night may
not be the best book for you. By the time Elie was liberated on April 11, 1945 he had been separated from his family, and had lost his father soon
before liberation. In conclusion i still think this book was a great book because it makes you think about how as we are getting older and more mature
we have to understand that not all things have a happy ending. But you still need to have hope and continue to push on so like Elie Wiesel did,and if you
do so great things might eventually come to
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Elie Wiesel
Creative Title A time where people were forced to leave their homes and everything they had in possession. This is something that happens to Elie
Wiesel author and main character of NIGHT. Elie and his family are from jewish descent and are dehumanized by the Germans and forced into
labour camps to work. They never knew what dangers they had ahead of them always having ignorance only to face the consequences. To lose and to
have everything only to be gone in a second never to be returned. Throughout his journey he finds himself powerless but only to find he stills has his
dignity. He even finds his humanity for his father for the last person that was there to support him and care for him. One important lesson Elie shows
in his book is...show more content...
Another theme that elie shows in the book is in a terrible or even horrible situation you always need your humanity at side. Elie meets a french girl
when he was at one of his terrible times she showed that the humanity was still in her no matter what happened. "I dragged myself to my corner. I
ached all over. I felt a cool hand wiping my bloodā€“stained forehead. It was the French girl. She gave me her mournful smile and slipped a bit of bread
into my hand. She looked into my eyes. I felt that she wanted to say something but was choked by fear. For a long moment she stayed like that,
then her face cleared and she said to me in almost perfect german: 'Bite your lip, little brother. . . . Don't cry. Keep your anger and hatred for
another day, for later on. The day will come, but not now. . . . Wait. grit your teeth and wait. . . .' " (Wiesel #51). The significance of this quote is
how she had the humanity to help someone and make them feel better after all of it. She put him first before anyone. Her kindness and her words
showed that she still had her humanity to be there for him. She even put her life on the line for him. She never spoke so they thought she was
french but as said "...In almost perfect German..." she spoke kind words that even if a kapo heard her she would have died. For they would have
punished her. Later in the book elie would have been punished or even killed for what he had done to be with his father. "The SS officers were
doing the selection: the weak, to the left; those who walked well, to the right. My father was sent to the left. I ran after him. An SS officer shouted at
my back: "Come back!" I inched my way through the crowd. Several SS men rushed to find me, creating such confusion that a number of people were
able to switch over to the rightā€“among them my father and I. Still, there were gunshots and some dead. The importance of
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Loss of Faith in Elie Wiesel's Night Essay
Loss of Faith in Elie Wiesel's "Night"
Night is a dramatic book that tells the horror and evil of the concentration camps that many were imprisoned in during World War II. Throughout the
book the author Elie Wiesel, as well as many prisoners, lost their faith in God. There are many examples in the beginning of Night where people are
trying to keep and strengthen their faith but there are many more examples of people rebelling against God and forgetting their religion.
The first example of Elie loosing his faith is when he arrived at Auschwitz. Elie and his father are directed to go to the left. A prisoner then informs
them that they are on their way to the crematory. Elie's father recites the Kaddish or prayer for the dead....show more content...
The pipel and the two other men were hung. The two adults died instantly but the pipel was too light and stayed alive for a half an hour.
He was still alive when I passed in front of him. His tongue was still red, his eyes were not yet glazed. Behind me I heard the same man ask where is
God now? And I heard a voice within me answer him: Where is He? Here He isā€“He is hanging here on this gallows? (Wiesel 62)
Another time Elie questions God and his faith is around Rosh Hashana, the new year. All the Jews gathered together to say prayers to God. He
questions God for allowing all these terrible things to happen to them when they live their lives for Him.
What are You, my God, I thought angrily, compared to this afflicted crowd, proclaiming to you their faith, their anger, their revolt? What does
Your greatness mean, Lord of the universe, in the face of all this weakness, this decomposition, and this decay? Why do You still trouble their sick
minds, their crippled bodies?? Why, but why should I bless Him? In every fiber I rebelled. Because He had had thousands of children burned in His
pits? Because He kept six crematories working night and day, on Sundays and feast days? Because in His great might He had created Auschwitz,
Birkenau, Buna and so many factories of death? How could I say to him Blessed art Thou, Eternal, Master of the Universe, Who chose us among the
races to be tortured day and night, to see our fathers, our mothers, our
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Night by Elie Wiesel Essay
NIGHT
Introduction
The Holocaust was the attempt by the Nazi regime to systematically exterminate the European Jewish race during World War II. The Holocaust was a
reference to the murder of around six million Jews and other minority groups such as homosexuals, gypsies and the disabled (Wiesel, 2008).
In the 1930's the Jewish population in Romania was around half a million. However, during World War II most of thoseJews sent to the labour barracks
or death camps (Wiesel, 2008).
Set the scene of the reader, what is it about?
Night by Elie Wiesel is about his experiences in the Nazi concentration camps of Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944 to 1945, at the height ofthe
Holocaust and toward the end of the Second World War. It is
...show more content...
Elie and his family were packed into cattle cars and taken to Auschwitz. As the train arrived, they saw smoke rising from chimneys and were assailed
by the horrific smell of burning flesh (Wiesel, 2008).
Describe what Elie calls the 'death race'?
The Death Race was the race by the Germans to kill as many Jews as they could. They wanted to wipe out the entire Jewish race to develop a German
'master race' (Wiesel, 2008).
The Germans were pushing the Jewish community towards death to see who survived. The Passover ended, "the curtain rose" (Wiesel, 2008) and the
Germans "arrested the leaders of the Jewish community" (Wiesel, 2008). Elie states, "from that moment, everything happened very quickly. The race
toward death had begun" (Wiesel, 2008).
It was at first a slow progression from limiting the rights of the Jewish people, to wearing the Star of David and then to the attempted extermination.
The Germans then began a race to kill the Jews as quickly as they could (Wiesel, 2008).
Why do you think the prisoner told Elie and his father to lie about their ages?
As they arrived at Auschwitz, a prisoner told Elie and his father to lie about their age in order to avoid the crematorium (Wiesel, 2008). Those deemed
fit to work were sent to the labour barracks, whereas children and the elderly were sent to the gas chambers
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Essay On Elie Wiesel
Elie Wiesel was a peaceā€“making, Nobel prize winning, Holocaust survivor. He battled something many of us could never even imagine. Elie Wiesel's
quote made me think, and then rethink, what I thought about compassion and helping people. The holocaust was a horrible time. It was a time where
compassion was needed daily to survive. In a lot of ways, we still need it. Weather it's against a presidential decision, or in the safety of a school
classroom. It will always be needed. Compassion is a mixture of kindness, empathy, and caring.
Elie Wiesel talks a whole lot about compassion. He does and I think he means the compassion given by friends, family, and even random strangers.
When you give compassion to them, they "become your anchor." In my opinion, Elie Wiesel means, you should help people rise up from the bottom
line. You should speak with compassion against the tyranny shown in this world. People need to speak with compassion, act with compassion, fight
with compassion, and even look at the world with compassion.
Martin Luther King Jr....show more content...
Maybe not in a direct way, but it did. The Holocaust was a terrible time. Many people died, or were forced to do hard labor. Elie Wiesel survived that
and lived to tell us the tale. After learning about everything that happened then, I think of how privileged we all are. We will never experience what
Elie or anyone in the Holocaust did. We will never truly understand. But, I do understand what we need to learn from it. We need to be kind to each
other, respect each other's differences and show compassion. We need to show each other the kindness that we still don't often see. Everyone is mean
to each other in this time. We need to respect each others differences. We are all different. We all believe in different things and look different ways.
We shouldn't hate each other for it. Finally, we just need to show each other compassion. That's all I can say to explain. Compassion is, and forever
will be,
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Elie Wiesel Rhetorical Analysis
Elie Wiesel uses many different styles to present his main purpose, one of the most widely used is anaphora. He does this to help the audience further
develop a context of the situations Wiesel went through as a child. Wiesel asserts, " They no longer feel pain, hunger, thirst. They feared nothing. They
felt nothing. They were dead and did not know it," this creates a reaction of the audience to feel sympathy for the "musselmanners" that were left to die,
it also forces the audience to imagine the horrific details of Wiesel's childhood. Furthermore, towards the end of his speech to change tones to appeal to
the audience while he questions the American government on why they chose not to intervene. He then creates another tonal shift, patronizing
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The Writing Style of Elie Wiesel Essay
The Writing Style of Elie Wiesel In the memoir Night, Elie Wiesel uses a distinct writing style to relate to his readers what emotions he experienced
and how he changed while in the concentration camps of Buna, during the Holocaust. He uses techniques like irony, contrast, and an unrealistic way of
describing what happens to accomplish this. By applying these techniques, Wiesel projects a tone of bitterness, confusion and grief into his story.
Through his writing Wiesel gives us a window into the complete abandonment of reason he adopted and lived in during the Holocaust. Wiesel uses a
black irony to emphasize the absence of normality in the concentration camps. As Eliezer marches into Auschwitz he notices a sign with the caption,
...show more content...
However, he uses ambiguous details to describe how the man dies, only saying, "Falling back onto the ground, his face stained with soup... then
he moved no more" (57). The very descriptive explanation of when and where the bombing occurred is not as important as the moment the man
dies, yet Wiesel chooses to describe the less important event more than the other. By not telling us how the man dies he leaves us wondering and
makes us conclude how and even if the prisoner dies. By making us examine the death of the prisoner more closely we are left with a deeper
impression of the event. The sudden change from a peaceful day of rest to one of chaos is another way of showing the confusion Eliezer feels.
The scene of the dying man resonates in our mind and shows us the horrors of the concentration camps. Wiesel also beautifully illustrates the
desperation of the prisoners in Buna by telling us about a man who would risk death just to have a bit of extra soup (57). One last writing technique
Wiesel employs is an almost unrealistic quality to the way he describes some events. As Eliezer travels to a new camp he is forced to stay in a shed,
cramped together, one on top of another with the rest of the Jews. There he hears the sound of a violin, "in this dark shed, where the
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Elie Wiesel Essay
Elie Wiesel
The book Night opens in the town of Signet where Elie Wiesel, the author , was born . He lived his child hood in the Signet, Transylvania . He had
three sisters Hilda, Bea, and Tzipora. His father was an honored member of the Jewish community. He was a cultured man concerned about his
community yet, he was not an emotional man. His parents were owners of a shop and his two oldest sisters worked for his parents. Elie was a school boy
and interested in studying the
Zohar "the cabbalistic books, the secrets of Jewish mysticism"(Wiesel 3). His teacher was a foreigner, Moshe the Beadle, a "poor barefoot of
Signet"(Wiesel 3).
He was Elie's teacher until he was forced to leave Signet by the Hungarians because he was a foreign Jew....show more content...
People tried to live as normal and felt they would remain in the ghetto until the end of the war. However this would not be the case. Elie's father
brought news to his family that they would be deported and the ghetto was to be destroyed. They did not know where they were going , only that they
would be leaving in the morning and could only take a few personal belongings.
Fortunately for the Wiesel family their journey was postponed for a couple of days. When they heard the words "All Jews outside!"( Wiesel 16) they
knew it was time to leave everything behind. The beginning of their journey was short. they stopped in another ghetto where they stayed for two days
until their journey would begin once again. After another stop they were then put on cattle wagons filled with eighty people to a car. It was
uncomfortable, there was barely any air, there was nothing to drink or eat, it was hot, and people had to take turns sitting down. When they arrived in
the town of Kaschau they heard the words "From this moment you come under the authority of the German army"(Wiesel
21). At this point they knew they were never going home. They traveled some more and soon they would arrive at Birkenau the reception center of
Auschwitz. When they arrived they could see flames and "smell burning flesh" (Wiesel 26).
People were being separated " Men to the left! Women to the right!"(Wiesel
27). This was when Elie and his father were separated from his mother and sisters. It would
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Reflective Essay About Elie Wiesel
Elie Wiesel is a Jewish boy who was taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp with his family. Elie Wiesel lived through the Holocaust and went
through emotional and physical changes.Elie Wiesel was separated from his mother and sisters at the concentration camp; he is with his father for the
rest of his father's shortened life. Elie Wiesel watched as his father was beaten by the kapo, Elie witnessed numerous people die throughout his time
in the concentration camps. Elie Wiesel and ninety nine plus people were shoved into train carts and taken various places, and were never told where
they were going. Elie Wiesel watched as men threw babies into the crematorium. Elie Wiesel went through some big life changes and as a result he
lost his faith in God, he lost his family.As a result of his experiences during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel changes from a religious, sensitive little boy to a
spiritually dead, unemotional man.
When Elie Wiesel first arrived at Auschwitz with his family, he was a nice, sweet, innocent...show more content...
Why should I sanctify His name? The Almighty, the eternal and terrible master of the Universe, chose to be silent. What was there to thank Him
for?Š’Š (33). This is the first time Elie Wiesel talks about how he feels that God has let him down. Elie Wiesel feels that he should not have to
sanctify God because god has chosen to be silent. Elie feels that his father should not be praying and thanking god because God has done nothing to
be praised or thanked. Š’Š Never shall I forget those flames that consumed my faith forever... Never shall I forget those moments that murdered my
God and my soul and turned my dreams to ashes.Š’Š (34). Elie Wiesel is implying that his first moments in the concentration camp, witnessing babies
and grown men being burned because they are jewish and no one in the whole world is willing to step forward and stop this madness, not even God,
he begins to lose his faith in
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What Is The Purpose Of Night By Elie Wiesel
A writer writes a novel with no purpose behind it. Yes, the book could possibly be really amazing, but in ,most cases people are not able to connect
or understand the book. However if you have an author who writes with purpose behind his words it is easier to connect and feel with the book. Elie
Wiesel wrote the book Night from personal experiences to show people what happened and he didn't just write for the fun of it. Elie wrote it with
passion and purpose and therefore has been able to have an impact in the world. Elie Wiesel wrote Night to teach the world a lesson about
dehumanizing people, not remaining mute, and the loss of religion. Dehumanization. One of the most important main principles of Night is how awful
the Nazis treated...show more content...
The morality of a person's faith in their religion was a key theme throughout the whole book. The first signs of challenge for the Jews was when
Akiba Drumer had lost all faith and hope, however he was able to pull himself together enough to ask for Kaddish. He did die and 3 days later
everyone was starting to feel the camps rath and they forgot to say Kaddish for him.Towards the beginning before Elie even knew about all the
camps there was a slight reference to the loss of his faith, "I looked at my house in which I had spent years seeking my God, fasting to hasten the
coming of the Messiah, imagining what my life would be like later. Yet I felt little sadness."(19) I feel as if Elie purposely put in the last section of
the quote as a way of foreshadowing his constant battle of religion throughout the book. As Elie attends a Rosh Hashanah service in one of the
camps he curses at God. At the beginning of chapter 9 is when I feel like he knew that he shouldn't quit on his faith in God because of one line, "On
April 5, the wheel of history turned." This was when the Jews were about to be liberated and I think he said this as an overall view that he could
finally breathe again and do the things in life that give him purpose.
In my essay I decided to include the 3 most important themes in my eyes, however there are plenty more that I could have choose. I had a hard time
deciding what were the main purposes of Elie writing Night because there are so many, because he
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What Is Elie Wiesel Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
Source 1: Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech (Elie Wisel)
Conflict: Many Jews died from the terrible tragedies of the Holocaust. They were sent to these concentration camps to wither be killed upon arrival, or
work to death.
What happened: Elie Wiesel told a speech on the people who died from the Holocaust, and how you should remember them so you won't forget the
tragedies that the Jews had to face in those difficult times. He also says that if you are seeing something wrong going on with the world, or if you
see someone suffering because of it, you should not stay silent, and instead should try to make a stop to it. This shows how he stands up for what he
believes in because Wiesel wants everyone to stand up for any conflict going on in the
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Thesis Statement In Night By Elie Wiesel
When responding to situations in life people must consider if doing so will benefit themselves or the people around them. In circumstances that
demand quick thinking people often can not form a concrete decision based on how little information and time they have. In life people frequently must
try to do so through their daily battles with the people around them as well as themselves.
Thesis Statement
In the literary memoir Night, Elie Wiesel illustrates how he faces many situations that require him to respond. Eliezer did not respond when he was
beat by a guard but instead takes the advice of a french lady and waits until the moment is right as well he did not respond to the Kapo who beat his
father as a result many instances just like these continually happen. Eliezer then finally responds to the men trying to throw his father out of the train
car as he knows if he does not say anything his father will die.
Body 1
While Elie is working at the electrical warehouse, Idek the Kapo goes on one of his fits of rage and beats him after the Kapo is done beating him a
french lady strides over to him disclosing her advice. 'Bite your lip, little brother....Keep your anger and hatred for another day, for later on. The day
will come, but not now....Wait. Grit your teeth and wait....'" (Pg.53) She is merely expressing how one must choose their battles and that even though
humans must stand up for themselves sometimes we must wait to do so as timing is everything.
Elie Wiesel struggles to fight through the concentration camp he must deal with many unfriendly encounters. "I had watched it all happening
without moving. I kept silent. In fact, I thought of stealing away in order not to suffer the blows. What's more, if I felt anger at that moment, it
was not directed at the Kapo but at my father. Why couldn't he have avoided Idek's wrath? That was what life in a concentration camp had made of
me..." (pg. 54). Elie wrestles with the idea of how to respond and even if he should react he debates that if he does respond then he will get beat, but
if he does not respond then he must watch his father be beat so he thinks to himself what would be more painful? By the end of the beating it is kind
of ironic how Eliezer is more
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Biography of Elie Wiesel Essay
Elie Wiesel was born on September 30, 1928 in the town of Sighet in Transylvania, which is located in Romania. His parents, Shlomo Wiesel and
Sarah Feig had three other children not including Elie. The three other siblings were his sisters Hilda, Bea, Tsiporah. Wiesel and his family primarily
were an Orthodox Jewish family. When he was very young he started to study Hebrew and the Bible. He mostly focused on his religious studies.
According to the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, "He was fifteen years old when he and his family were deported by the Nazis to Auschwitz."
During the time they spent at Auschwitz, Elie's mother and younger sister didn't make it, but his two older sisters were fortunate enough to survive.
"Elie and his...show more content...
Elie Wiesel fought against indifferences mainly which lead to him and his wife creating an organization most reputably as The Elie Wiesel Foundation
for Humanity. He called attention mostly to when the Holocaust happened and what they endured while being in there and he also would travel to
various countries speaking out on his beliefs and why it wasn't right to have done that to humans. The Holocaust simply just ignored human rights
completely without any consideration at all for the people affected by it. According to Humanitarians and Reformers, "no one has more vividly
conveyed the horrors of the Holocaust or gone more deeply into its implications." Even though he wrote mostly about Jewish suffering that isn't his
only concern all of human suffering is. "This has taken him not only to the Soviet Union to give moral support to Soviet Jews and to work for their right
of emigration but to African and Latin American countries to intercede for victims of injustice and brutality" (Humanitarians and Reformers). The
Western Jews were the Jews who did not wish to speak out, but to remain silent. While as the Soviet Jews were the ones who didn't remain silent they
spoke out on the hardships they endured and let the world know what truly happened. Elie Wiesel took fighting indifference and the results the
Holocaust had left to the sufferers, and made them into books and he also would speak on the
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Essay about Night by Elie Wiesel
Night is a novel written from the perspective of a Jewish teenager, about his experiences as a prisoner during the Holocaust. Our teenager named
Eliezer grew up in the small community of Sighet, located in Hungarian Transylvania. It's here that Eliezer studies religion, both the Cabbala and the
Torah. At the beginning of the war Eliezer was dedicated and absolute in his belief of God, but throughout the events of World War II his faith slowly
starts to wither away. Eliezer's main conflict that governs the story would be sustaining his belief in God. This becomes especially hard throughout the
book, as he has to face more and more challenging issues. Moshe the Beadle is the one character that Eliezer learned about his faith from, Moshes
...show more content...
It's in these moments that Eliezer has lost all faith he had in humanity and religion, which he had previously learned from Moshe. One point in the
story that Eliezer questions his faith in God is when they are forced to watch the hanging of other prisoners, one time the Gestapo even hangs and
kills a small child for being associated with the rebels. It seems that during this point the prisoners start to react for means of survival only, family
members were turning on each other. The prisoners turn cold hearted and cruel towards each other because now their only concern is survival. Because
of the horrific events in the concentration camp and the everā€“present risk of death does Eliezer begin to lose his faith in humanity and his God. Eliezer
has a tough time understanding how the world and the Gestapo can be capable of this much fury. Because his teachings tell him that God is good,
and since God is everywhere the world therefore must be good. Another strong theme from the book is the importance of family bonds, especially if
that's all you have left in harsh conditions. Eliezer has a hard time watching the other families interact because they no longer share a special bond of
love but instead share the idea of selfishness. More than once Eliezer experiences the rupture of the bond a family shares between both the father and
son. He describes his bond with his father as a support system; they both ensure the other has enough to survive
Get more content on HelpWriting.net
How Did Elie Wiesel Impact The World
Have you ever wondered what it took to be a hero? Elie Wiesel is an example of how you can be one. Wiesel wrote many books to spread the
misfortune of the Holocaust. He also taught humanities at Boston University. Before he died he had the honor of being awarded a Nobel Peace Prize,
in his efforts to void the world of hate and violence. He impacted the world by keeping the memory of the Holocaust alive but omitting the idea of it. In
the end, he helped many see the importance of uniting to overcome something so evil.
Elie Wiesel has contributed much to the world we live in. There are many things that Elie has done that have left an impact on our world. Some of
those contributions are writing books, teaching, and winning the Nobel Peace Prize. Elie Wiesel's books have influenced the world because they...show
more content...
They also display the hardships he faced and inspire people to keep the memory existent, but not to let it happen again.Elie Wiesel has composed
numerous books such as Town of Luck (1962), Gates of the Forest (1966), and The Oath (1973). He wrote these books to notify other people
regarding the holocaust. He wanted to make sure it didn't happen again and no more people would have to suffer the way people in the holocaust
suffered. Wiesel taught humanities at Boston University. He kept telling his students how wrong it was to infringe someone's human rights like his
in the past were. He became a teacher to make the world secure, and he taught against hate and violence. He strongly believed that good could beat
evil if the world was united as one. He showed his leadership when he won the Nobel Peace Prize for his ideology, principles, and beneficial
teachings. "Elie won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986. The Nobel citation honoring him stated 'Wiesel is a messenger to mankind. His
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Elie Wiesel Biography Essay

  • 1. Elie Wiesel Biography Essay Elie Wiesel Biography Elizer Wiesel, Elie for short, was born in Sighet, Romania on September 30th in 1928 to Shlomo and Sarah Wiesel. He had two older sisters and one younger sister. He was born into a very religious family, starting his religious schooling at the very young age of 3. Though this widely recognized author, journalist, and social activist is mostly known for his memoir telling of the horrors of the Holocaust it was even during his childhood he, his family, and his fellow Jewish community faced discrimination and injustices for their religious beliefs. In an interview for achievement.org he told of how twice a year on holidays such as Christmas and Easter he recalls the "antiā€“Semitic outbursts" and how he and the other Jewish people were afraid to go outside of fear of being beaten...show more content... But this was nothing compared to the nightmare soon to come to Elie. Shortly before Elie and his family were to be deported they actually had two opportunities to attempt to flee to safety. A caretaker of the synagogue named Moshe warned the people of the camps and mass exterminations happening after escaping himself. The people, including the Wiesel family, brushed it off assuming he was crazy and continued to live their lives. After hearing more and more of these rumors, Maria, a Christian maid to the Wiesel family, offered to take them to her hut in the mountains to hide until it was safe but again the family stayed put with their community (www.jewishlibrary.org). In 1944 Elie, only age 15 at the time, and his family were deported to Auschwitz, a concentration camp in Poland. It was there he saw his mother and younger sister be taken to the gas chamber and killed. He lied saying he was an 18 year old farmer in good health so he would be kept alive. He and his father survived Auschwitz but on the march to Buchenwald his father passed from dysentery and starvation. Buchenwald Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 2. Elie Wiesel Writing Style The Holocaust was a time of death. It was initiated by Adolf Hitler and his German army and was the mass genocide that killed over six million Jews. Among those were women and children being sent to death right away, the others were then "selected", Elie Wiesel was one of the lucky ones. He was a survivor who lived to tell about his experience in the death camps. Elie Wiesel wrote the book 'Night' because he felt it was his duty and responsibility to show readers what really happened during the Holocaust. His writing style effectively develops his point of view so he is able to convey a compelling storyā€“his story. Death campsā€“A very heart wrenching subject. As a young boy, Elie had to experience the pain and suffering that was considered "normal" in a concentration camp. Death become just death, people became numb, life went on until one day you couldn't go on and were then sent to the crematorium. Survival was a huge aspect in the book 'Night'. The daily rations were a piece of stale bread and some soup. As time went on rations got less and people began to get ravenous. As stated in the text "You're killing your father...I have bread...for you too...for you too..." (Wiesel 101) The theme of survival relates not to just this book and the Holocaust, but in the real world. It is our humanly instincts to stay alive. Once that factor kicks in you start to lose sight of what matters in your life, like happiness and relationships. That's why on page 101 the boy killed his father for just Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 3. Essay Themes in "Night" by Elie Wiesel THemes 1.) Man's inhumanity to man Removal of human looks that defined who they are * Same uniform * Cut hair to remove individuality. * "In a few seconds we had ceased to be men" 37 * "I became Aā€“7713. From then on, I had no other name"42 The harshness of the camp quickly transformed them into selfish indifferent people * "I had not even blinked, only yesterday I would have dug my nails into the criminals flesh" 39 * "you're killing your father"101 * "The old man mumbled something, groaned and died. Nobody cared" 101 * "I shall never forgive myself. Nor shall I forgive the world for having pushed me against the wall, for having turned me into a stranger, for having awakened in me the basest, most...show more content... Without love or mercy. I was nothing but ashes now" 68 * "But as soon as he felt the first chinks in his faith, he lost all incentive to fight and opened the door to death" 77 * "I have more faith in Hitler than anybody else. He alone has kept his promises, all his promises to the Jewish people." 81 * " I suffer hell in my soul and in my flesh... how can anybody believe in this God of mercy" 3.) Kindness in adversity Helping each other out in times of need * Elie's father made sure Elie didn't "fall asleep forever" in the snow despite his exhaustion. Pg 88 * The French girl risked her life by saying to Elie in almost perfect German, "don't cry. Keep your anger, your hate, for another day, for later. The day will come but not now... wait. Clench your teeth and wait" * "Elie even gave his dying father extra rations, despite being told to "stop giving your ration of bread and soup too your old father... in fact you should be getting his rations." * Working through the struggles together see father son relationships Elie and father * "No. You're eighteen... Not fifty. You're forty. Dou you hear? Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 4. Research Paper On Elie Wiesel Elie Wiesel The Holocaust was a terrible, dark time in the 1900s (1933ā€“1945). Many Jewish families were broken up and killed. Elie Wiesel is one of the many who was saved from dying of starvation. Elie created stories based on his experience in the Auschwitz concentration camp. He used persistence while in these camps by not losing the will to live. Elie inspired many people to live life to the fullest, (he didn't get to live the perfect life he probably imagined when he was little) even if you come across problems. Elie Wiesel was a Holocaust survivor who took in the passion of writing. He not only wrote many books but created awareness of the terrible time in Germany during World War II. Elie Wiesel wrote the book Night among many others. Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 5. Elie Wiesel's Night Elie Wiesel was born on September 30, 1928, in Sighet, Transylvania. He grew up with three sisters and had a strong interest in religious studies. In 1944, Nazis forced Jews who resided in Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania to relocate to labor and death camps in Poland. When Elie was at the age of 15, he and his entire family were sent to Auschwitz. Elie lived in camps with inhuman conditions and was almost starved to death. He was eventually freed from Buchenwald in 1945. Out of all of his family members only him and two of his sisters survived. Elie then moved on to become many great things like a writer which won him a Nobelā€“Prize. He wrote many books including the one i am reading "Night". Elie also taught Judaic studies at the City University...show more content... Every year we were assigned to read and do some type of book report and i would never make it through the book because it never kept me interested. Night is a book i can say that actually kept me interested enough to make it through the whole thing. This book made you feel every emotion that Elie felt from the weakness, sadness, and the feeling of losing hope. Wiesel wrote the book so detailed even if it was harsh. I think the things i will remember the most is how descriptive he was while explaining how some of the innocent people would die. Also how they were put through such harsh things like inhuman labor, harsh travel conditions, and starvation. In my opinion this book was a bit different because at the end of the book you always expect there to be some type of little happy ending. I can tell you now that if you are into happy endings Night may not be the best book for you. By the time Elie was liberated on April 11, 1945 he had been separated from his family, and had lost his father soon before liberation. In conclusion i still think this book was a great book because it makes you think about how as we are getting older and more mature we have to understand that not all things have a happy ending. But you still need to have hope and continue to push on so like Elie Wiesel did,and if you do so great things might eventually come to Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 6. Elie Wiesel Creative Title A time where people were forced to leave their homes and everything they had in possession. This is something that happens to Elie Wiesel author and main character of NIGHT. Elie and his family are from jewish descent and are dehumanized by the Germans and forced into labour camps to work. They never knew what dangers they had ahead of them always having ignorance only to face the consequences. To lose and to have everything only to be gone in a second never to be returned. Throughout his journey he finds himself powerless but only to find he stills has his dignity. He even finds his humanity for his father for the last person that was there to support him and care for him. One important lesson Elie shows in his book is...show more content... Another theme that elie shows in the book is in a terrible or even horrible situation you always need your humanity at side. Elie meets a french girl when he was at one of his terrible times she showed that the humanity was still in her no matter what happened. "I dragged myself to my corner. I ached all over. I felt a cool hand wiping my bloodā€“stained forehead. It was the French girl. She gave me her mournful smile and slipped a bit of bread into my hand. She looked into my eyes. I felt that she wanted to say something but was choked by fear. For a long moment she stayed like that, then her face cleared and she said to me in almost perfect german: 'Bite your lip, little brother. . . . Don't cry. Keep your anger and hatred for another day, for later on. The day will come, but not now. . . . Wait. grit your teeth and wait. . . .' " (Wiesel #51). The significance of this quote is how she had the humanity to help someone and make them feel better after all of it. She put him first before anyone. Her kindness and her words showed that she still had her humanity to be there for him. She even put her life on the line for him. She never spoke so they thought she was french but as said "...In almost perfect German..." she spoke kind words that even if a kapo heard her she would have died. For they would have punished her. Later in the book elie would have been punished or even killed for what he had done to be with his father. "The SS officers were doing the selection: the weak, to the left; those who walked well, to the right. My father was sent to the left. I ran after him. An SS officer shouted at my back: "Come back!" I inched my way through the crowd. Several SS men rushed to find me, creating such confusion that a number of people were able to switch over to the rightā€“among them my father and I. Still, there were gunshots and some dead. The importance of Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 7. Loss of Faith in Elie Wiesel's Night Essay Loss of Faith in Elie Wiesel's "Night" Night is a dramatic book that tells the horror and evil of the concentration camps that many were imprisoned in during World War II. Throughout the book the author Elie Wiesel, as well as many prisoners, lost their faith in God. There are many examples in the beginning of Night where people are trying to keep and strengthen their faith but there are many more examples of people rebelling against God and forgetting their religion. The first example of Elie loosing his faith is when he arrived at Auschwitz. Elie and his father are directed to go to the left. A prisoner then informs them that they are on their way to the crematory. Elie's father recites the Kaddish or prayer for the dead....show more content... The pipel and the two other men were hung. The two adults died instantly but the pipel was too light and stayed alive for a half an hour. He was still alive when I passed in front of him. His tongue was still red, his eyes were not yet glazed. Behind me I heard the same man ask where is God now? And I heard a voice within me answer him: Where is He? Here He isā€“He is hanging here on this gallows? (Wiesel 62) Another time Elie questions God and his faith is around Rosh Hashana, the new year. All the Jews gathered together to say prayers to God. He questions God for allowing all these terrible things to happen to them when they live their lives for Him. What are You, my God, I thought angrily, compared to this afflicted crowd, proclaiming to you their faith, their anger, their revolt? What does Your greatness mean, Lord of the universe, in the face of all this weakness, this decomposition, and this decay? Why do You still trouble their sick minds, their crippled bodies?? Why, but why should I bless Him? In every fiber I rebelled. Because He had had thousands of children burned in His pits? Because He kept six crematories working night and day, on Sundays and feast days? Because in His great might He had created Auschwitz, Birkenau, Buna and so many factories of death? How could I say to him Blessed art Thou, Eternal, Master of the Universe, Who chose us among the races to be tortured day and night, to see our fathers, our mothers, our Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 8. Night by Elie Wiesel Essay NIGHT Introduction The Holocaust was the attempt by the Nazi regime to systematically exterminate the European Jewish race during World War II. The Holocaust was a reference to the murder of around six million Jews and other minority groups such as homosexuals, gypsies and the disabled (Wiesel, 2008). In the 1930's the Jewish population in Romania was around half a million. However, during World War II most of thoseJews sent to the labour barracks or death camps (Wiesel, 2008). Set the scene of the reader, what is it about? Night by Elie Wiesel is about his experiences in the Nazi concentration camps of Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944 to 1945, at the height ofthe Holocaust and toward the end of the Second World War. It is ...show more content... Elie and his family were packed into cattle cars and taken to Auschwitz. As the train arrived, they saw smoke rising from chimneys and were assailed by the horrific smell of burning flesh (Wiesel, 2008). Describe what Elie calls the 'death race'? The Death Race was the race by the Germans to kill as many Jews as they could. They wanted to wipe out the entire Jewish race to develop a German 'master race' (Wiesel, 2008). The Germans were pushing the Jewish community towards death to see who survived. The Passover ended, "the curtain rose" (Wiesel, 2008) and the Germans "arrested the leaders of the Jewish community" (Wiesel, 2008). Elie states, "from that moment, everything happened very quickly. The race toward death had begun" (Wiesel, 2008).
  • 9. It was at first a slow progression from limiting the rights of the Jewish people, to wearing the Star of David and then to the attempted extermination. The Germans then began a race to kill the Jews as quickly as they could (Wiesel, 2008). Why do you think the prisoner told Elie and his father to lie about their ages? As they arrived at Auschwitz, a prisoner told Elie and his father to lie about their age in order to avoid the crematorium (Wiesel, 2008). Those deemed fit to work were sent to the labour barracks, whereas children and the elderly were sent to the gas chambers Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 10. Essay On Elie Wiesel Elie Wiesel was a peaceā€“making, Nobel prize winning, Holocaust survivor. He battled something many of us could never even imagine. Elie Wiesel's quote made me think, and then rethink, what I thought about compassion and helping people. The holocaust was a horrible time. It was a time where compassion was needed daily to survive. In a lot of ways, we still need it. Weather it's against a presidential decision, or in the safety of a school classroom. It will always be needed. Compassion is a mixture of kindness, empathy, and caring. Elie Wiesel talks a whole lot about compassion. He does and I think he means the compassion given by friends, family, and even random strangers. When you give compassion to them, they "become your anchor." In my opinion, Elie Wiesel means, you should help people rise up from the bottom line. You should speak with compassion against the tyranny shown in this world. People need to speak with compassion, act with compassion, fight with compassion, and even look at the world with compassion. Martin Luther King Jr....show more content... Maybe not in a direct way, but it did. The Holocaust was a terrible time. Many people died, or were forced to do hard labor. Elie Wiesel survived that and lived to tell us the tale. After learning about everything that happened then, I think of how privileged we all are. We will never experience what Elie or anyone in the Holocaust did. We will never truly understand. But, I do understand what we need to learn from it. We need to be kind to each other, respect each other's differences and show compassion. We need to show each other the kindness that we still don't often see. Everyone is mean to each other in this time. We need to respect each others differences. We are all different. We all believe in different things and look different ways. We shouldn't hate each other for it. Finally, we just need to show each other compassion. That's all I can say to explain. Compassion is, and forever will be, Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 11. Elie Wiesel Rhetorical Analysis Elie Wiesel uses many different styles to present his main purpose, one of the most widely used is anaphora. He does this to help the audience further develop a context of the situations Wiesel went through as a child. Wiesel asserts, " They no longer feel pain, hunger, thirst. They feared nothing. They felt nothing. They were dead and did not know it," this creates a reaction of the audience to feel sympathy for the "musselmanners" that were left to die, it also forces the audience to imagine the horrific details of Wiesel's childhood. Furthermore, towards the end of his speech to change tones to appeal to the audience while he questions the American government on why they chose not to intervene. He then creates another tonal shift, patronizing Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 12. The Writing Style of Elie Wiesel Essay The Writing Style of Elie Wiesel In the memoir Night, Elie Wiesel uses a distinct writing style to relate to his readers what emotions he experienced and how he changed while in the concentration camps of Buna, during the Holocaust. He uses techniques like irony, contrast, and an unrealistic way of describing what happens to accomplish this. By applying these techniques, Wiesel projects a tone of bitterness, confusion and grief into his story. Through his writing Wiesel gives us a window into the complete abandonment of reason he adopted and lived in during the Holocaust. Wiesel uses a black irony to emphasize the absence of normality in the concentration camps. As Eliezer marches into Auschwitz he notices a sign with the caption, ...show more content... However, he uses ambiguous details to describe how the man dies, only saying, "Falling back onto the ground, his face stained with soup... then he moved no more" (57). The very descriptive explanation of when and where the bombing occurred is not as important as the moment the man dies, yet Wiesel chooses to describe the less important event more than the other. By not telling us how the man dies he leaves us wondering and makes us conclude how and even if the prisoner dies. By making us examine the death of the prisoner more closely we are left with a deeper impression of the event. The sudden change from a peaceful day of rest to one of chaos is another way of showing the confusion Eliezer feels. The scene of the dying man resonates in our mind and shows us the horrors of the concentration camps. Wiesel also beautifully illustrates the desperation of the prisoners in Buna by telling us about a man who would risk death just to have a bit of extra soup (57). One last writing technique Wiesel employs is an almost unrealistic quality to the way he describes some events. As Eliezer travels to a new camp he is forced to stay in a shed, cramped together, one on top of another with the rest of the Jews. There he hears the sound of a violin, "in this dark shed, where the Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 13. Elie Wiesel Essay Elie Wiesel The book Night opens in the town of Signet where Elie Wiesel, the author , was born . He lived his child hood in the Signet, Transylvania . He had three sisters Hilda, Bea, and Tzipora. His father was an honored member of the Jewish community. He was a cultured man concerned about his community yet, he was not an emotional man. His parents were owners of a shop and his two oldest sisters worked for his parents. Elie was a school boy and interested in studying the Zohar "the cabbalistic books, the secrets of Jewish mysticism"(Wiesel 3). His teacher was a foreigner, Moshe the Beadle, a "poor barefoot of Signet"(Wiesel 3). He was Elie's teacher until he was forced to leave Signet by the Hungarians because he was a foreign Jew....show more content... People tried to live as normal and felt they would remain in the ghetto until the end of the war. However this would not be the case. Elie's father brought news to his family that they would be deported and the ghetto was to be destroyed. They did not know where they were going , only that they would be leaving in the morning and could only take a few personal belongings. Fortunately for the Wiesel family their journey was postponed for a couple of days. When they heard the words "All Jews outside!"( Wiesel 16) they knew it was time to leave everything behind. The beginning of their journey was short. they stopped in another ghetto where they stayed for two days until their journey would begin once again. After another stop they were then put on cattle wagons filled with eighty people to a car. It was uncomfortable, there was barely any air, there was nothing to drink or eat, it was hot, and people had to take turns sitting down. When they arrived in the town of Kaschau they heard the words "From this moment you come under the authority of the German army"(Wiesel 21). At this point they knew they were never going home. They traveled some more and soon they would arrive at Birkenau the reception center of Auschwitz. When they arrived they could see flames and "smell burning flesh" (Wiesel 26). People were being separated " Men to the left! Women to the right!"(Wiesel 27). This was when Elie and his father were separated from his mother and sisters. It would Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 14. Reflective Essay About Elie Wiesel Elie Wiesel is a Jewish boy who was taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp with his family. Elie Wiesel lived through the Holocaust and went through emotional and physical changes.Elie Wiesel was separated from his mother and sisters at the concentration camp; he is with his father for the rest of his father's shortened life. Elie Wiesel watched as his father was beaten by the kapo, Elie witnessed numerous people die throughout his time in the concentration camps. Elie Wiesel and ninety nine plus people were shoved into train carts and taken various places, and were never told where they were going. Elie Wiesel watched as men threw babies into the crematorium. Elie Wiesel went through some big life changes and as a result he lost his faith in God, he lost his family.As a result of his experiences during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel changes from a religious, sensitive little boy to a spiritually dead, unemotional man. When Elie Wiesel first arrived at Auschwitz with his family, he was a nice, sweet, innocent...show more content... Why should I sanctify His name? The Almighty, the eternal and terrible master of the Universe, chose to be silent. What was there to thank Him for?Š’Š (33). This is the first time Elie Wiesel talks about how he feels that God has let him down. Elie Wiesel feels that he should not have to sanctify God because god has chosen to be silent. Elie feels that his father should not be praying and thanking god because God has done nothing to be praised or thanked. Š’Š Never shall I forget those flames that consumed my faith forever... Never shall I forget those moments that murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to ashes.Š’Š (34). Elie Wiesel is implying that his first moments in the concentration camp, witnessing babies and grown men being burned because they are jewish and no one in the whole world is willing to step forward and stop this madness, not even God, he begins to lose his faith in Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 15. What Is The Purpose Of Night By Elie Wiesel A writer writes a novel with no purpose behind it. Yes, the book could possibly be really amazing, but in ,most cases people are not able to connect or understand the book. However if you have an author who writes with purpose behind his words it is easier to connect and feel with the book. Elie Wiesel wrote the book Night from personal experiences to show people what happened and he didn't just write for the fun of it. Elie wrote it with passion and purpose and therefore has been able to have an impact in the world. Elie Wiesel wrote Night to teach the world a lesson about dehumanizing people, not remaining mute, and the loss of religion. Dehumanization. One of the most important main principles of Night is how awful the Nazis treated...show more content... The morality of a person's faith in their religion was a key theme throughout the whole book. The first signs of challenge for the Jews was when Akiba Drumer had lost all faith and hope, however he was able to pull himself together enough to ask for Kaddish. He did die and 3 days later everyone was starting to feel the camps rath and they forgot to say Kaddish for him.Towards the beginning before Elie even knew about all the camps there was a slight reference to the loss of his faith, "I looked at my house in which I had spent years seeking my God, fasting to hasten the coming of the Messiah, imagining what my life would be like later. Yet I felt little sadness."(19) I feel as if Elie purposely put in the last section of the quote as a way of foreshadowing his constant battle of religion throughout the book. As Elie attends a Rosh Hashanah service in one of the camps he curses at God. At the beginning of chapter 9 is when I feel like he knew that he shouldn't quit on his faith in God because of one line, "On April 5, the wheel of history turned." This was when the Jews were about to be liberated and I think he said this as an overall view that he could finally breathe again and do the things in life that give him purpose. In my essay I decided to include the 3 most important themes in my eyes, however there are plenty more that I could have choose. I had a hard time deciding what were the main purposes of Elie writing Night because there are so many, because he Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 16. What Is Elie Wiesel Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech Source 1: Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech (Elie Wisel) Conflict: Many Jews died from the terrible tragedies of the Holocaust. They were sent to these concentration camps to wither be killed upon arrival, or work to death. What happened: Elie Wiesel told a speech on the people who died from the Holocaust, and how you should remember them so you won't forget the tragedies that the Jews had to face in those difficult times. He also says that if you are seeing something wrong going on with the world, or if you see someone suffering because of it, you should not stay silent, and instead should try to make a stop to it. This shows how he stands up for what he believes in because Wiesel wants everyone to stand up for any conflict going on in the Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 17. Thesis Statement In Night By Elie Wiesel When responding to situations in life people must consider if doing so will benefit themselves or the people around them. In circumstances that demand quick thinking people often can not form a concrete decision based on how little information and time they have. In life people frequently must try to do so through their daily battles with the people around them as well as themselves. Thesis Statement In the literary memoir Night, Elie Wiesel illustrates how he faces many situations that require him to respond. Eliezer did not respond when he was beat by a guard but instead takes the advice of a french lady and waits until the moment is right as well he did not respond to the Kapo who beat his father as a result many instances just like these continually happen. Eliezer then finally responds to the men trying to throw his father out of the train car as he knows if he does not say anything his father will die. Body 1 While Elie is working at the electrical warehouse, Idek the Kapo goes on one of his fits of rage and beats him after the Kapo is done beating him a french lady strides over to him disclosing her advice. 'Bite your lip, little brother....Keep your anger and hatred for another day, for later on. The day will come, but not now....Wait. Grit your teeth and wait....'" (Pg.53) She is merely expressing how one must choose their battles and that even though humans must stand up for themselves sometimes we must wait to do so as timing is everything. Elie Wiesel struggles to fight through the concentration camp he must deal with many unfriendly encounters. "I had watched it all happening without moving. I kept silent. In fact, I thought of stealing away in order not to suffer the blows. What's more, if I felt anger at that moment, it was not directed at the Kapo but at my father. Why couldn't he have avoided Idek's wrath? That was what life in a concentration camp had made of me..." (pg. 54). Elie wrestles with the idea of how to respond and even if he should react he debates that if he does respond then he will get beat, but if he does not respond then he must watch his father be beat so he thinks to himself what would be more painful? By the end of the beating it is kind of ironic how Eliezer is more Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 18. Biography of Elie Wiesel Essay Elie Wiesel was born on September 30, 1928 in the town of Sighet in Transylvania, which is located in Romania. His parents, Shlomo Wiesel and Sarah Feig had three other children not including Elie. The three other siblings were his sisters Hilda, Bea, Tsiporah. Wiesel and his family primarily were an Orthodox Jewish family. When he was very young he started to study Hebrew and the Bible. He mostly focused on his religious studies. According to the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, "He was fifteen years old when he and his family were deported by the Nazis to Auschwitz." During the time they spent at Auschwitz, Elie's mother and younger sister didn't make it, but his two older sisters were fortunate enough to survive. "Elie and his...show more content... Elie Wiesel fought against indifferences mainly which lead to him and his wife creating an organization most reputably as The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity. He called attention mostly to when the Holocaust happened and what they endured while being in there and he also would travel to various countries speaking out on his beliefs and why it wasn't right to have done that to humans. The Holocaust simply just ignored human rights completely without any consideration at all for the people affected by it. According to Humanitarians and Reformers, "no one has more vividly conveyed the horrors of the Holocaust or gone more deeply into its implications." Even though he wrote mostly about Jewish suffering that isn't his only concern all of human suffering is. "This has taken him not only to the Soviet Union to give moral support to Soviet Jews and to work for their right of emigration but to African and Latin American countries to intercede for victims of injustice and brutality" (Humanitarians and Reformers). The Western Jews were the Jews who did not wish to speak out, but to remain silent. While as the Soviet Jews were the ones who didn't remain silent they spoke out on the hardships they endured and let the world know what truly happened. Elie Wiesel took fighting indifference and the results the Holocaust had left to the sufferers, and made them into books and he also would speak on the Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 19. Essay about Night by Elie Wiesel Night is a novel written from the perspective of a Jewish teenager, about his experiences as a prisoner during the Holocaust. Our teenager named Eliezer grew up in the small community of Sighet, located in Hungarian Transylvania. It's here that Eliezer studies religion, both the Cabbala and the Torah. At the beginning of the war Eliezer was dedicated and absolute in his belief of God, but throughout the events of World War II his faith slowly starts to wither away. Eliezer's main conflict that governs the story would be sustaining his belief in God. This becomes especially hard throughout the book, as he has to face more and more challenging issues. Moshe the Beadle is the one character that Eliezer learned about his faith from, Moshes ...show more content... It's in these moments that Eliezer has lost all faith he had in humanity and religion, which he had previously learned from Moshe. One point in the story that Eliezer questions his faith in God is when they are forced to watch the hanging of other prisoners, one time the Gestapo even hangs and kills a small child for being associated with the rebels. It seems that during this point the prisoners start to react for means of survival only, family members were turning on each other. The prisoners turn cold hearted and cruel towards each other because now their only concern is survival. Because of the horrific events in the concentration camp and the everā€“present risk of death does Eliezer begin to lose his faith in humanity and his God. Eliezer has a tough time understanding how the world and the Gestapo can be capable of this much fury. Because his teachings tell him that God is good, and since God is everywhere the world therefore must be good. Another strong theme from the book is the importance of family bonds, especially if that's all you have left in harsh conditions. Eliezer has a hard time watching the other families interact because they no longer share a special bond of love but instead share the idea of selfishness. More than once Eliezer experiences the rupture of the bond a family shares between both the father and son. He describes his bond with his father as a support system; they both ensure the other has enough to survive Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 20. How Did Elie Wiesel Impact The World Have you ever wondered what it took to be a hero? Elie Wiesel is an example of how you can be one. Wiesel wrote many books to spread the misfortune of the Holocaust. He also taught humanities at Boston University. Before he died he had the honor of being awarded a Nobel Peace Prize, in his efforts to void the world of hate and violence. He impacted the world by keeping the memory of the Holocaust alive but omitting the idea of it. In the end, he helped many see the importance of uniting to overcome something so evil. Elie Wiesel has contributed much to the world we live in. There are many things that Elie has done that have left an impact on our world. Some of those contributions are writing books, teaching, and winning the Nobel Peace Prize. Elie Wiesel's books have influenced the world because they...show more content... They also display the hardships he faced and inspire people to keep the memory existent, but not to let it happen again.Elie Wiesel has composed numerous books such as Town of Luck (1962), Gates of the Forest (1966), and The Oath (1973). He wrote these books to notify other people regarding the holocaust. He wanted to make sure it didn't happen again and no more people would have to suffer the way people in the holocaust suffered. Wiesel taught humanities at Boston University. He kept telling his students how wrong it was to infringe someone's human rights like his in the past were. He became a teacher to make the world secure, and he taught against hate and violence. He strongly believed that good could beat evil if the world was united as one. He showed his leadership when he won the Nobel Peace Prize for his ideology, principles, and beneficial teachings. "Elie won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986. The Nobel citation honoring him stated 'Wiesel is a messenger to mankind. His Get more content on HelpWriting.net