Luke spoerel Ms. Gribbin 7 / February / 2023 English 8 Nothing Left No food, no water, and barely any life, were the conditions that Elie Wiesel a 15 year old holocaust survivor had to endure for 11 months. Imagine you are crammed into small cattle carts and transported to a camp, where you are forced to do hard labor, given no food, and the chance of survival is close to none. All because of your religion. In the book, Night, by Elie Wiesel dehumanization is shown when you are selected either to live or to die based on how you looked, Having to fight and kill others just for a piece of bread and being forced to run until they physically could not. One way the Jews were dehumanized was when their fate was determined by how they looked. When you first stepped into Auschwitz you were either sent to the left or the right. If you were sent to the left you were sent to the gas Chambers and if you were sent to the right you would have to live in terrible conditions until you died. “He was holding a conductor's baton and was surrounded by officers. The baton was moving constantly, sometimes to the right, sometimes to the left” (Wiesel 31). This shows that the ss Ofsers did not think twice about the Jews. In the Quote when it says “The baton was moving constantly” (Wiesel 31). It means that they did not care enough to look at the people as …show more content…
the SS officers would give themselves entertainment by making them fight for a single piece of bread. “"No. I wasn't asleep. They threw themselves on me. They snatched it from me, my b r e a d ... And they beat m e ... A g a i n … I can't go on” (Wiesel 110). This shows that some of the prisoners had no mercy for even a dying man. It proves that they were given nothing and that they would have to fight if they wanted to live. The second thing that this quote shows is that these people were desperate. so desperate that it made good people
Dehumanization in “Night” is represented in the discrimination and deniance of simplest human necessities. Hitler developed his hatred for the Jewish religion after WWI, believing that they were the source of Germany’s economic decline. Jews also seemed an easy target to blame due to history’s track record of antisemitic views dating back to Ancient Egypt. Hitler created concentration camps, factories of death, to eradicate Jews because Hitler thought they were inferior. This discrimination took place in countless places through the book; one, for example, when the Jewish ghettos were being liquidated everyone was forced to remain within their lines; they were denied water all day while standing in the blasting heat of the sun.
They felt the pain, suffer, and lose. SS Officers were told how the Jews should feel, how they should treat them, and what things they themselves were not allowed to feel of do and I have tied this into my poem. These men, these soldiers were forced to do many horrific things as they repressed the Jewish and then act as if it had no effect on them. They had a job to accomplish and if they did not treat the jews as told or kill enough of them they would me moved to the front line of the war, where their chances of surviving were
But no one replaced us”. This shows that the guards are being subbed in and out to watch over the prisoners but the Jews had to walk for hours without any stopping and no one could sub in for them and take a break. He describes the cold, hunger, and death that he and his fellow prisoners face every day. He also uses powerful metaphors to show the dehumanization of the Jews, such as when he writes that "the SS was no longer human beings. They were beasts with human faces, men with the morals of animals.
However, no one did anything to save them. Every prisoner at these concentration camps suffered from torture, starvation, hypothermia, and they were forced to work, which soon led to death. In Holocaust survivor Eliezer Wiesel’s novel, Night, he gives you insight about what life was like as a prisoner during World War II was really like. In his eyes, he saw that it was an injustice that no one came to save him and the other prisoners. Wiesel believes that it was difficult for a Jew to help another but he cannot understand why a citizen
They had to give their age and profession which led the baton to choose whether they were going to the left or right and either meant you were going to the prison or the crematorium. To the left was the crematorium that looked like huge flames rising from the ditch and something burning from that side, “I did see this, with my own eyes…children thrown into the flames” (Wiesel 32). This quote strongly demonstrates dehumanization through the actions of throwing a baby, not even a child yet, to the flames and killing them. No humanity is being shown throughout this camp and the SS officers are showing no pity towards these babies. Along with getting chosen which route jews shall go, they still don't have any right to speak up about it.
During their journey, the Nazis forced them to run faster and farther than they thought possible and were motivated by fear of death if they were to not oblige. “The SS made us increase our pace. ‘ Faster, you tramps, you flea-ridden dogs!’” (85). While attempting to run a near-impossible distance, they were called names and yelled at, and were treated and talked to as if they were so much less than humans.
Dehumanization: to deprive of human qualities or attributes; divest of individuality. (Dictionary.com) In the book “Night”, Elie Wiesel, a 15 year old boy, describes the cruel, and dehumanizing treatment by the Nazi’s during the Holocaust. Europe, January of 1933, is the point in time where it all changed. Jews became the helpless victims of the German Nazi political party, and were innocent to the idea of what was coming for them.
The SS waited/ guns ready” (60.1,2/1-7). This excerpt is noticeably harder to read or understand than the article. Also, Meg Wiviott uses different poetic devices like enjambed lines and imagery to create a different encounter for the reader. This creates a harder reading experience where the reader might have to think about what the information means, but also brings a distinct interpretation to the knowledge. The information in these passages both express the same ideas concerning how the victims got off of their transportation.
When the SS chose to slide away just proved that they were scared. Fear had consumed them to the point where cruelty no longer mattered, the officers wanted to survive just as the victims of the holocaust wanted to. Fear can corrupt someone to be cruel because it is a way to deny vulnerability and mask it with acts of aggression. They feel cruelty is the only thing that can save Them.
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, The author shares his story and describes the conditions he had endured in order to survive in concentration camps during the Holocaust. Among these conditions, the prisoners had to experience dehumanization by the Nazis. In the novel Elie and the others had to experience dehumanization through many different concentration camps they went to and the mental and physical tolls these camps had on them. Dehumanization is the process of treating others as if they are less human, essentially depriving them of their human qualities, personality, and dignity. There are many instances in the book where dehumanization is a key concept such as when the Jews had to endure prohibition and forceful assimilation in Sighet,
This is a direct example the dehumanization the Nazis employ to meet their agenda. Dehumanization occurs with the intent to force cooperation and force those under it’s effects to
Dehumanization is a major of human cruelty. This quote shows the dehumanization that the Nazis were putting forth on the Jews. ”Without passion or haste, they shot their prisoners, who were forced to approach the trench one by one and offer their necks. Infants were tossed into the air
In 1933 the Nazi party of Germany came to power to rebuild the world. They envisioned a perfect race of blond hair, blue-eyed Germans ruling the world, ridding it of all who were different. They were especially brutal to the Jews of Europe, murdering over six million Jews between 1933 and 1945. But before the Nazis gave them the mercy of death they made them worn, tired, and less than human. Dehumanization is stripping people or a group of positive human qualities.
This is clear in how they were forced to give up names and go by numbers instead. Wiesel notes that “From then on, we were nothing more than a number” (57). This illustrates how the prisoners were reduced to nothing more than a numerical value, with their ideas and individuality stripped away. As the harsh conditions pounded on Wiesel, he exclaims, “I was nothing but a body. Perhaps even less: a famished stomach.
Prisoners not killed on arrival had mandatory labor and lived off small rations of bread and soup. The prisoners were constantly faced with choiceless choices, situations where both options are a loss. Despite all this, some prisoners, such as Elie Wiesel, found a way to survive. Knowing that the Soviet