The world, hate, and religion. How the Holocaust brings this altogether. Like a child we trust and believe in what we are told. We are excited to learn more. In this book called Night Elie Wiesel was excited to learn more about his religion and the study of Kubbalah. Elie Teacher was a man named Moishe the Beadle who Elie looked up to. When Moishe the Beadle came back to the town with the story about what the Germans did to them Elie be gain to question more on what was told to him. It is hard story to believe that German would have them dig a ditch and the shoot all the people in the ditch and leave them for dead. Moishe came back when the coast was clear for he was only hit in the leg but they thought he was dead. Moishe came back to ware the people in the …show more content…
Most people couldn't, believe a child could save the world. When the Germans came to town it was to late to escape. Just like when Jesus came again it will be to late to believe in Jesus. When the Germans came to the town they were fence in forced to leave all worldly things behind. When we die we leaved all the worldly things our homes and all thing in them. They were forced the pile on to over crowed cattle car on a train. The had no shelter from the cold. The were given little to nothing to eat or drink. There as one lady who the thought was out of her mind but she kept yelling about seeing fire. Little did the know she had a vision on what was coming. When the train stopped for the last time the saw the big fire from the Crematorium. The were separated from there love ones to stand in front of a German who would Tell them to go into the fire of death in the Crematorium or to go onto the concentration camp. This is what it will be like when we die we are separated from our love ones and the angle at the gate of Heaven will let us in or turn us away to fire in hell. The Jews that when into the concentration camp were strip of all human
The book Night is a memoir written by Elie Wiesel. This memoir is about Eliezer, a young Jewish boy, and his experience of the Holocaust that killed about 12 million people. Weisel used conflict to convey the central idea not to be blind to the truth. One of the characters in the book is called Moshe the Beadle. He was a pauper who roamed the streets of Sighet, Romania, the town where Elizer lives.
Do you know about the holocaust? In the book, Night, by Ellie Weisel there were many terrible things that happened. Among these terrible things were the loss of many innocent people, Jews were separated from their family and undiagnosed PTSD from the few survivors. In the story many people were separated and some put into gas chambers and suffocated. They were mostly transported in cattle cars that were extremely crowded.
Night is a book written by the author and nobel peace prize winner Elie Wiesel. It is not a fictions book, but it is a life story. In the book, the people are not characters, but true people whom our author met and knew during this time. Elie Wiesel was alive during the Holocaust as a Jew forced to live in ghetto. The book is told from his perspective, and tells what happens at the largest concentration camp, auschwitz.
Night is a nonfiction book about Elie Wiesel, who shares his life when he was in a concentration camp. Before I read this book, I didn’t know about much about the Holocaust other than Natiz took Jews to concentration camps. After reading this book I learned; Natizs would first, take Jews to a camp where families would be separated (women and children would be killed). They would only keep young and healthy men alive to work in the camps. These men were forced to work in harsh environments with little food and awful treatment from the Nazis.
In the beginning we learn he is very devoted to his practices of the Jewish tradition, and he prays multiple times a day and believes that god can do anything. But as they are torn from their homes and deported into the ghetto’s he is forced to ask god for mercy such as when they reach the small ghetto they all fall to the ground and pray “Oh God, Master of the Universe, in your infinite compassion, have mercy on us”. But as they are transported to camps and conditions become severely worse he starts questioning his faith and why god would let something happen so horrible happen to him and his family. In the end perhaps the worst death of all was of his of his religion due to Hitler’s extreme cruelty and
Book Report Katelyn Bourg Foundations of Religion and Faith Ms. Denyer October 24, 2014 Elie Wiesel is a survivor from the holocaust. The book is narrated by himself who is a teenager with a Jewish background. He lived in a town called Siget in Transylvania with his mother, father and his three sisters. The Jewish people had to wear yellow stars .One day the town he lived in was forced to move into ghettos and then eventually moved into small ghettos.
Simone Rosson Ms. Ahonen English 1301 1st period 22 October 2015 Night Night, is an autobiography by Elie Wiesel about the tragic events he endured during the Holocaust. Wiesel was one of the very few who survived the horrid times of the Holocaust. He was stationed in Auschwitz-Birkenau, one of the very well known camps. The story begins in the year 1941 when him and his family are torn from their home and transported to a concentration camp.
The book I chose to read, “Night”, was named after Elie Wiesel’s darkest time period in his life. When Elie was young, he was enslaved by the Nazi’s. In the novel, Elie tells us how harsh conditions were for the Jews and what they had to experience. After the Holocaust, he was inspired to write about the concentration camps that he stayed at and what he experienced while he was in the death camp. I chose to read this book because I wanted to learn more about the Holocaust and what the Jewish people had to experience.
---Rough Draft--- While we probably all know that the Holocaust was a horrible stain on the fabric of society, Elie Wiesel's book shows that the acts of the Nazi's are more horrible towards the Jews than some of us may have been led to believe. Elie originates from a town known as Sighet located in what was previously known as Transylvania. Though Sighet was not part of Germany or Hungary, they were still abused by the SS soldiers, by trapping them in fenced off ghettos. They also soon transported them in a terrible cattle car ride, and treated them like slaves. But the meat of the story takes place in the concentration camp(s), where they are given minimal amounts of food and judged like dogs to see if they are worth keeping.
They had rough nights at the barracks because they were not built properly. They had very poor living conditions due to things that could have very easily been avoided. What was Elie's life like after the
During the Holocaust, many human rights were violated. After so much time without basic human rights, those who were in concentration camps were ready to kill anyone who got in their way of food. People were deprived of food, water, and clothes. When people first arrived at concentration camps they were separated by men, children, and women. The men were forced to do labor while the women and children were burned.
Dehumanization of the Jews During the Holocaust, dehumanization of the Jews took place. The Natzis would do several things to try and make the Jews feel like animals and nothing more. They wanted to show that the Jews were a race that should have not existed. They would go to any means to complete their objective of an Aryan race.
During World War II, the United States discovered that the energy of the atom could be used in a new form of bomb. However, the Germans also discovered this, meaning that it would be a race to actually complete the weapon. The U.S. knew it needed to act fast and so three facilities were created for the development of the weapon in Washington, New Mexico, and Tennessee. The plants in Tennessee were based in almost the middle of nowhere.
Many people are shocked the Nazis would bomb a street that translates to Heaven. At age nine Liesel Meminger was put into the care of Hans and Rosa Hubermann (deceased.) She is not thirteen and again without a family. Liesel's six year old brother, Werner, died on the train ride with her mother to her Munich. Her foster father taught her to read.
However, children of Nazi soldiers were a large group of children who were affected by the war, but in a very different way. They were sheltered from what was happening in the war. They were taught to believe that Hitler was an honorable, smart man with a goal to make Germany better. After the end of World War II, children of Nazi soldiers knew what type of politics and hatred their parents had supported and contributed to. “Imagine what it must be like to grow up as a child of a mass murderer” (Evans, 2016).