Night Loss Of Faith In God
In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel shows the decline of his conviction in God. Elie’s faithfulness in the beginning of his life is unquestionable. He has never thought about why he prays, much less breathes or thinks. He wants his dad to teach him about the supernatural virtue of his religion and he wants to devote his life to his Master of the universe, God. After the life changing experience in the concentration camps at Auschwitz, Wiesel has lost his devotion in his Creator. Having a great deal of faith in God for many years and then losing it in a matter of months is difficult. For Wiesel he questions God multiple times about his ways before he lets his religion go. Even after though he continues to let his
The book Night by Elie Wiesel shows how suffering and witnessing the painful deaths of many innocent lives can be the cause of loss of faith in the benevolent god. This book is taken in a horrible, inhumane place called the Holocaust. It all started when Moshe the Beadle stopped talking about God after he had witnesses the massacre of Jews by the German Gestapo; at that time no one believed him but time would prove them wrong. When Elie witnesses the horror of the concentration camps and what they do to people especially children he feels as if his God has been murdered right before his eyes. In the camp he sees an atrocity after atrocity, death after death.
He goes though the book telling the reader how he had began to lose not only his faith but himself as well. His faith, which at the beginning of the book was something he valued greatly and wanted to get deeper into. But sadly, as the book goes on he begin to resent hid god due to prayers not being answered right away and the circumstances of the holocaust were that of which he felt a god such as the one he had grown up serving should not subject his people to. We also see Wiesel lose himself though out this experience. On the closing paragraph of his memoir Wiesel states, “From the depths of the mirror, a corpse was contemplating me.
In Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night, the theme of faith impacts Elie's experiences throughout the Holocaust. One time when faith impacts Elie’s experiences is when he believes that God is the reason he gets to keep his shoes. Elie writes, “I thanked God, in an improvised manner…” (Wiesel 38).This quote shows Elie's initial belief in God and his faith during the early times of the Holocaust when he expresses gratitude for his shoes not being taken.
Throughout the book “Night”, Elie battles with his faith and at times almost gives it up. Eliezer’s struggle with his faith is a dominant conflict in Night. Throughout the story, the holocaust proves that Elie’s faith is a necessary element for his survival. It preserves his sanity whether or not it is based in reality.
What comes to mind when one thinks of total loss, confusion, and anger towards something? To Eli Wiesel, this is his life as less than a human. His life following his capture by the Nazis and the inhabitants in the multiple concentration camps turned his life upside down. Some would say he faced all odds and even had his doubts regarding who he was and why he was part of these dreadful, seemingly, God-forsaken events. Needless to say, his memoir Night, will follow his life as an eager child of God, to almost complete loss of faith in Him.
He was originally an incredibly dedicated religious believer and followed every custom in the book. He even went against his father’s wishes and found a master to further his devotion to God (4). As the Holocaust went on, however, Wiesel simply could not believe that God would allow this sort of thing to happen, and accused Him of it, then lost his faith (68). He even did not fast on Yom Kippur to please his father and rebel against God (69). But, even after all that happened, there was still a part of him who believed in God, and that part showed itself when he prayed to God to “give me the strength never to do what Rabbi Eliahu’s son has done” (91).
Soon Wiesel discovers that God does not exist. He stops fasting and as other gave up their faith, he was amazed. Wiesel and the Jews were so dependent on God but the concentration camps have killed them of their faith/religion. This powerful moment challenges the reader and makes them think due to Wiesel turning his back on
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.
In the book Night, Elie Wiesel describes his struggles as a Jew in a concentration camp using a depressing and serious tone, meant to reflect the horrific conditions the Jews were forced to face and the theme that adversity can cause a loss in faith. From the time Elie first arrived at the camp and heard everyone saying prayers, to when the young pipel was hung, and even when the Jews had to make the long, arduous, trek to the other camp, the reader could see his faith dwindling as he continued to question where his God was and why he wasn’t helping the Jews. Not only was a lack of faith evident in Elie himself, but the other Jews around him, even the priests, were having trouble believing in their God. Elie’s disheartened and somber tone
Wiesel's loss of faith was brought on by the absence of God. This resulted in him questioning why it was God's will to allow Jews to suffer and die the way they had. Another portrayal of religious confliction within Wiesel was the statement of his faith being consumed by the flames along with the corpses of children (Wiesel 34). Therefore, he no longer believed God was the almighty savior everyone had set Him out to be or even present before them. To conclude, his experiences within Nazi confinement changed what he believed in and caused him to change how he thought and began questioning God because of the actions He allowed to take
Wiesel changes vastly throughout the book, whether it is his faith in God, his faith in living, or even the way his mind works. In the beginning of his memoir, Wiesel appeared to be faithful to God and the Jewish religion, but during his time in concentration camps, his faith in God wavered tremendously. Before his life was corrupted, he would praise God even when he was being transferred to Auschwitz, but after living in concentration camps, he began to feel rebellious against his own religion. In the book, Elie
Why do you go on troubling these poor people’s wounded minds, their ailing bodies?”(Wiesel 68) Wiesel clearly is losing faith in God because he has seen babies burned alive, families killed together. Wiesel blames God for what has happened. Additionally, Elie Wiesel is not thankful for God anymore because he is not in Auschwitz helping him and the rest of the Jews. Wiesel feels anger towards God.
At the start of the memoir “Night”, Elie Wiesel strongly emphasizes his faith, and the powerful connection that he shares
God’s perceived silence during a time of desperate need can lead to the lost of faith or doubt within oneself. In Elie Wiesel’s Night, the narrator struggles to maintain his faith and his identity he witnesses the dehumanizing acts being inflicted upon him and many other Jews. As he experience more and more atrocities in the camps, Elie begins to rebel against his religious upbringing. Elie survives the Holocaust through a battle of conscience: first believing wholeheartedly in God, then resisting that faith, and finally reclaiming that faith.
It caused his dad to become very ill. To start, Elie Wiesel changed drastically during the Holocaust. Throughout the story “Night”, Elie finds himself questioning his faith in God. He asks himself “Where is God? Why, but why would I bless him?