When going through difficult times maintaining your faith is hard, but you always have to keep a little in order to get through it. In the memoir Night, Elie Wiesel uses Eliezer’s change in faith to show that when going through things, you have to keep your faith in order to survive. In Night, Eliezer goes into the Holocaust having to be separated from most of his family. He is left with only his father, having to go to concentration camps. Things throughout the Holocaust just kept getting worse. Eliezer and the Jews had to go through a lot but kept their faith to come out alive. Having faith is difficult when things keep getting worse. For Eliezer, he had to be in a concentration camp where he had to work and conditions were very bad.
In the book “Night” written by Ellie Wiesel, Wiesel explains how regardless of notices about German goals towards Jews, Eliezer's family and alternate Jews in the little Transylvanian town of Sighet neglect to escape the nation when they have a shot. Therefore, the whole Jewish populace is sent to death camps. There, in a camp called Auschwitz, Eliezer is isolated from his mom and more youthful sister, however stays with his dad. As Eliezer battles to get by against starvation and manhandle, he additionally thinks about the confidence in God's equity and fights with the darker sides of himself. Constrained into a frantic circumstance, Eliezer feels a contention between supporting his regularly debilitating father and giving himself the most obvious opportunity with regards to survival.
Elie Wiesel, the writer of the novel Night, based the book on his experience and the observations he made during his time in a Nazi concentration camp. The prisoners fought to make it through for their families with the chance of seeing them again. The prisoners thought that the entire event was God testing their faith and whether or not they would still praise him after all was over. Concentration camp prisoners did not have the will to live, but continued to live in hopes of liberation, reuniting with their families, and keeping their faith in God. Although Wiesel lost his faith early on in the book, many of the Jews still maintained their faith because they could not comprehend that what was going on in their lives was something purely
Religion. A strong word for some and an everyday term for others. To Eliezer Wiesel religion meant everything, at least that’s how it was prior to the holocaust. While Wiesel was at the appalling concentration camp his faith for God began to dwindle with every reprehensible event Eliezer was included in. While dwelling upon the relationship that Wiesel had with God throughout the novel Night I have come to the conclusion that Wiesel's experience at Auschwitz has stripped him of his faith for the lord.
Everyone was in danger, from jews to gypsies to even homosexuals. If you were seen as different, you were likely to die. During this time period, many German people were feeling racially superior to an extreme point where they felt the only thing to do was put an end to everyone else; this was the Holocaust. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie tells his story about his life during the Holocaust, and everything he went through to keep his father and himself alive. Everyone's faith in the goodness of God was being tested during the Nazi era.
There comes a time when everyone questions their faith due to a tragedy or visual tragedy they experienced. Elie Wiesel saw the effects of holocaust and experienced it Elie faith was very strong in religious matters he prayed and hoped that his god did this for a purpose and could forgive him but when he saw the effects were to harmful for just not everyone but himself. For examples the part of the book night in chapter 2 the burning baby’s/ baby’s being thrown into the pit of fire, the never ending work process, and the killings although his faith was strong it was almost vacant to him due to the effects he experienced. 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.
One of the prominent themes in Night is Elie’s struggle with his faith. As a young man Elie was very religious as shown here. “By day I studied the Talmud and by night I would run to the synagogue.” This quotation shows how devoted Elie was to his religion. But that faith diminishes after being taken by the Germans and after seeing the atrocities of the holocaust, as shown in this quote.
In Night by Elie Wiesel, he uses constant questioning to explain that when people are forced into traumatic situations they begin losing their personal faith in God. In the beginning of this passage Elie begins to question God, he is curious as to “Why do you [God] go on troubling these poor people’s wounded minds, their ailing bodies?” (S. 5) Elie, as well as his father, are slowly losing their belief in God, due to their experiences in the past year. His father told him to keep the faith, but holding out hope has done nothing to help them, nothing changed. Elie is gaining strength, but losing faith.
Have you ever been traumatized so much that you stopped believing in faith, a thing that you have looked to your whole life? In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, he describes his own traumatizing experiences in the camps. He tells his story through the character Eliezer. Eliezer is a regular 14-year-old boy living in Sighet with his mom, dad, and sisters. Eliezer is supper faithful and always looks to God for advice.
People in the past years have been discriminated against, they were Jews and they were killed this event is called the Holocaust. An event where Jews were killed all because people had thoughts based on this religion, so stay and hear how certain aspects help people get through the Holocaust. The Holocaust is a time when obviously many millions were killed by people named Nazis all because they thought that the Jews were an inferior and bad race. Even though Jewish is not a race it is a religion. They were tortured and killed while families and friends watched knowing that they could not do anything to stop this madness.
Faith is defined as complete trust or confidence in someone, something prisoners of the Holocaust often struggled to find. The horrific and oppressive behavior that millions of prisoners had to endure at a plethora of concentration camps had even the most orthodox Jews questioning their adamantine faith in God. Further, faith in their relatives or peers was fragile as well, as separation and death in the camps were common. Eliezer, the main character in the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, finds faith in his father, as well as God. However, as time goes on in the camps, these faiths begin to falter, which leads to his ultimate faith in himself - which proves to be a necessity for him to survive.
“You don’t understand... You cannot understand. I was saved miraculously. I succeeded in coming back. Where did I get my strength?
Losing faith one train ride at a time Many began to lose faith in their god when going through a hardship. It is difficult to have faith in a god who has permitted harm on innocent people. They began to lose hope in survival and began to believe that god may be unjust. In Night by Elie Wiesel, Eliezer starts off as a very religious Jew.
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.
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.
After such a long time without help, these people will start to question their faith and eventually, they will rebel against it. In the memoir, Night by Elie Wiesel, a survivor of The Holocaust, Elie shows that faith is often lost in times of testing or trial. One example of Elie losing his faith is when he was questioning his belief in God. "I suffer hell in my soul and my flesh. I also have eyes and I see what is being done here.