At the beginning of night, Eliezer describes himself as someone who believes ‘’Profoundly’’. How have his experiences at Auschwitz and other camps affect that faith? Eliezer's faith has changed tremendously throughout this book. This may be because of the concentration camps and other horrible experiences throughout this book. In chapter one eliezer questions, ‘’Why did I pray …’’ this means he is already starting to question his own faith. But not that much due to this only being the beginning of the long experience ahead. The question why did pray is only showing that Eliezer is starting to lose faith.Because Eliezer, at the beginning of Night he said he was a profound believer so a profound believer would not dare question praying to god.He
Everyone should always have faith in what they believe in. Eliezer is a Jewish boy that is very faithful. He slowly loses faith in God. Elie lost his home and family. Before, the invasion from the Germans started, everyone in the village is living a normal life.
He is much more involved in religion than the rest of his family. When his father asks “why do you pray?” Eliezer’s response is shocked at first, as if it was a ridiculous question to ask. To him, religion and prayer is so innate and important that it’s simply second nature. His decline in religious faith is a direct consequence of the inhumane circumstances of concentration camps.
From Devotion to Doubt As a young adolescent, Eliezer Wiesel is taken to a place where he is beaten, spit on, and treated like nothing more than an object. In his memoir, Night, Eliezer takes readers on a journey through the horrors of being a young Jew in a concentration camp during the Holocaust. These camps are so awful that public hangings and burning people alive are normal occurrences. Witnessing and experiencing these horrific events causes Eliezer’s previously unshakable faith in God to waver.
Elie would “ pray to god within me that he would give me strength to ask him the right questions.” (Wiesel 4) I believed this meant that he was trying to ask why Jews are jews being hated and despised for no reason. Moshe the beadle talks to Elie after praying and says “why do you pray” (Wiesel 4) Elie was confused as he was thinking about why did i pray, why did breath, why did humanity start.
Religion, it may not be for everyone. Some may not care or believe in it, however to many it is. It's often the most important thing to some and what keeps them going to live a happy life. They say it's a part of them and that they will never stop believing and lose their faith.
Edmund Burke once said, “Nothing is so fatal to religion as indifference”. In the memoir, Night, by Elie Wiesel, Elie struggles to comprehend why God is letting such horrible things happen during the Holocaust, which in turn lessens his faith in God. He believes that no one, even God, should turn away, or show indifference to such a horrible situation. In this memoir, it is evident that Elie’s faith in God has changed.
Near the end of the book, while the Jews were being taken to Buchenwald, Eliezer encounters Rabbi Eliahu who has lost his son. However, Eliezer realizes that the Rabbi’s son abandoned him when they were being forced to run to Gleiwitz. Thoughts run through Eliezer's mind about how terrible it would be to abandon his father, his purpose for living,”And in spite of myself, a prayer formed inside me, a prayer towards this God in whom I no longer believed” (91). With all that has happened, Eliezer still stays true to his religion but in the process loses his stalwart devotion which shows in this quote when he says that the prayer is directed towards a God he no longer believes in. Eliezer believes that this God has turned his back on him, but still acts nostalgic towards the days when he was hopelessly devoted to knowing his whole religion.
60 million dead in World War II. 11 million captured and killed. All due to one man’s prejudice and hate. Adolf Hitler started a war over prejudiced ideals and beliefs. In that war: concentration camps, and in those camps: people like Elie Wiesel.
By overcoming his faith in both his father and his God, he turned to himself for protection and hope. With his father, his faith was created through the situational case of the Holocaust, as they transformed their relationship because of their need to survive. However, ultimately, this faith was deemed to be redundant, as his father ended up hurting him, and his chance of survival. Coming into the camps, Eliezer was a religious boy, even trying to pursue and further understand the Cabbala. However, after seeing innocent people get killed, under the so-called “watch” of God, he began to doubt his faith.
In the memoir Night, the narrator Elie Wiesel recounts a moment when he questioned God, ¨Blessed be God’s name? Why, but why would I bless him? Every fiber in me rebelled, he caused thousands of children to burn his Mass graves?¨(Wiesel 68). Overall, Wiesel does not follow the words of God and is not believing in him anymore because he thinks God is the one thatś letting all the inhumanity occur. One theme in Night is that inhumanity can cause disbelief or incredulity.
In the autobiography Night, Elie Wiesel retells his story of surviving in one of Hitler's concentration camp, Auschwitz. Elie survives the Holocausts unlike his parents and youngest sister, but he loses his faith through this dreadful journey. Elie’s loss of faith changed his identity as a person. In the beginning of this memoir, Wiesel’s faith is so strong that he is interested about learning about his faith from a young age and he even cries when he prays. Once Eliezer gets taken to Auschwitzs, his faith becomes damaged immensely.
In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel a character in the book, Eliezer, begins to lose his faith. This occurs after many horrific incidents in the novel such as babies being burned alive or a child killing his father for a mere scrap of bread. Towards the beginning of his living hell Eliezer clings to his faith, like many others, hoping that his experiences were a test from God. His faith deteriorated more and more throughout his nightmare. His thoughts go from desperately clawing to keep his faith to blaming God for abandoning his children to denial of faith completely.
“I had new shoes myself. But as they were covered with a thick coat of mud, they had not been noticed. I thanked God in an improvised prayer for having created mud in His infinite and wondrous universe.” (Wiesel 38). In the Memoir Night by Elie Wiesel he makes it prominent that throughout dire situations you cannot lose your faith or religion.
Loss of Faith in Night Night by Elie Wiesel is about a 15 year old Jew’s experience during the holocaust. Through Night, Elie Wiesel shows many experiences where he and other Jews lose their faith as they wonder why He hasn’t done anything to help them during these terrible, unimaginable times. Loss of faith discourages people and makes them feel empty, especially during hardships and struggles. This theme is shown in Night not only through Moishe the Beadle, but also all the other Jews as they are sent to camps and treated inhumanely.
The Holocaust affects Jews in a way that seems unimaginable, and most of these effects seem to have been universal experiences; however, in the matter of faith, Jews in the concentration camp described in Elie Wiesel’s Night are affected differently and at different rates. The main character, Elie, loses his faith quickly after the sights he witnesses (as well as many others); other Jews hold on much longer and still pray in the face of total destruction. In the beginning, all of the Jews are more or less equally faithful in their God and religion.