Since the Nazis try to drain the mental well-being of the prisoners, Elie Weisel loses his sense of identity within the fence of the concentration camp. During the end of the Jewish year, Weisel describes himself as, “an observer, a stranger” (68). As Elie survives the camp and sees the atrocities, he loses his faith in God. He has no more strong beliefs and is more of a bystander in life. Elie believes he is nobody. Elie's character develops because he shows his loss of identity in his Jewish faith. Another example that supports the claim is when Elie stopped believing in the Jewish faith and says, “My eyes had opened and I was alone, terribly alone in a world without God, without man” (66). Weasel again describes as an unbeliever, he has
During the Holocaust many people lost everything, including belongings, family, friends, and even their lives. Even more people lost their identities. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie loses his identity because of the Germans. They took all of his possessions and his family. They even replaced his name with a number.
Weeded from the Jewish ghettos located in Sighet, Romania in May of 1944, fifteen year-old Elie Wiesel is planted in the cold, yet flame filled, concentration camp known as Auschwitz-Birkenau, one out of Hitler's 40,000 incarnation camps. In Elie Wiesel's memoir Night, Wiesel shares his gruesome experiences in great detail in which he endured within the two-years he was a Jewish prisoner. Elie Wiesel is one out of the minority of Jews to survive the Holocaust whilst World War ll took place in Europe. Although Elie Wiesel is a known survivor of this great cataclysm on humanity, the remainder of his family was not as fortunate to share that title. The death of his family, along with the many other deaths and forms of torture that Wiesel witnessed,
A theme within the book Night was about identity. The main character Eliezer and the rest of his fellow prisoner were stripped of their identities. Eliezer had his head shaved, he is dressed like all the other prisoners, his faith was taken away, and his innocence was also stripped from him. When entering the camp, Eliezer were all given numbers tattooed onto the instead of names to be called by. Everybody is no longer individuals, they are all one group or just bodies.
In the story “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he gives us his perspective on the holocaust. The holocaust was a horrible time for the Jews. Adolf Hitler hated them and treated them with so much cruelty. Most were separated from their families, and others would be praying to stay alive. During that time they had to keep a lot of faith in their God because if they didn't they would fall apart.
In the novel Night by Elie Wiesel, there are many hardships that caused the characters to lose faith in their religion. Night is a 1960 memoir based on Weisel's Holocaust experiences with his father in the Nazi German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944 -1945 toward the end of the Second World War in Europe. In the novel many prisoners struggle with their faith. “Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my god and my soul and turned my drams to dust.”
Night In Night by Elie Wiesel the Jews suffer greatly because of the Holocaust. The Germans show great prejudice against the Jews. This unfounded hatred causes the Jews to experience a loss of innocence once at Auschwitz. The Germans forced them to become people they aren’t.
Elie Wiesel's character transforms throughout the book as he experiences the Holocaust. While some may argue that Elie's experiences made him weaker as a person, it is clear that they also made him stronger, and more committed to fighting for human rights. At the beginning of the book, Elie is an innocent young man, deeply committed to his family. However, as he and his family are deported to the concentration camps, Elie's faith is being challenged. He witnesses countless atrocities and suffers unimaginable trauma, including the loss of his father.
Night is a memoir of a Jewish boy who lives to see the horrors during the Holocaust. He tells an emotional tale of his scarring experiences at multiple concentration camps. He begins with his family in his hometown of Sighet, where they are forced into supervised ghettos. The authorities then begin shipping the Jews into concentration camps, in which he is separated from his mother and sister. He and his dad are then forced to Auschwitz, where they begin their series of struggles.
The story Night the Jews are exposed to an uncaring, hostile world, which leads to destruction of faith and identity within the Jewish communities. The Jews are not expecting to be treated so awfully, but they are not willing to do all the things that the Germans want them to do. Near the beginning of the memoir, by Elie Wiesel Moche the Beadle undergoes a loss of faith after witnessing horrific acts of inhumanity. The Jews were treated as if they were trash on the street. No one felt the need to say anything because they felt they would be beaten even more.
“...I decided to look at myself in the mirror on the opposite wall. I had not seen myself since the ghetto. From the depths of the mirror, a corpse was contemplating me.” Elie Wiesel ends the novel Night off with a notably grave, yet powerful statement. One would say that this quote symbolizes the theft the Jews endured through the event known as the Holocaust.
At this point in the story, Elie’s interest in practicing and studying religion starts to wane. These actions are out of character for him because in his home, Sighet, prayer and worship are a daily ritual. In fact, he commits himself to spending long days learning with his Kabbalah master and even longer nights praying at the synagogue. Consequently, at the camp, Elie feels that there is no need for religion because he believes God is no longer there for him. Elie’s actions directly correlates with the theme portrayed in the story because he let go a major part of himself due to the merciless environment of the
When faced with a crisis, most people lose faith in everything they have. This is what took place in Jewish lives during the Holocaust. Those who were forced into concentration camps were starved, worked to death, beaten, tortured, and many of them were unable to survive. Even though they went through hell and back, there were people who sustained their faith and helped others. Most prisoners in the concentration camp shut down because they were pushed way beyond their comfort zones, while others continued to fight because they decided that their will to live was much stronger than the threats they faced.
As I leaped out of the cattle car after that long, terrible ride, i heard a Nazi soldier saying that family will be kept together and work will not be hard. I did not believe that one bit because my mother was already taken away and things are already going really bad. Then we got into a line and marched into the camp. The, i noticed that the gate of the camp says that work makes you free. After I read those words I knew things were going to be way worse than ever.
The cruelty of the German officers at the concentration camps change Elie’s personality throughout the novel. At the beginning of the novel, Elie is deeply religious and spends most of his time studying Judaism. However, by the end of the novel, Elie believes that God has been unjust to him and all the other Jews, and has lost most of his faith. The cruelty of the German officers also changed the other Jews as well. The events of the Holocaust forces the prisoners to fend for themselves, and not help others.
Elie Wiesel started out as an innocent 15 year old who constantly studied the talmud and was dedicated for his religion of judaism. However, how can someone keep of hold of such an identity when having to go through world war 2, and being sent to a concentration camp where many people see it as hell. Also, being labeled as just a number, and not even to be considered as a breathing human being thought to have any sort of emotion. Showing that you may have an identity going in, but it’s mostly likely going to vanish if you get out. That being said, the book Night by Elie Wiesel expresses the identity with Elie Wiesel through religion, but experiences a struggle keeping it while going to the concentration camp of