Mr.Wiesel wanted to survive the Holocaust with his family, but they were separated and he was luckily left with Elie and they stayed alive for a long time during the Holocaust, so through the years Mr.Wiesel survived a long time for the reason of his son and wanting to survive the genocide with his family, then they went through some life threatening events but they were still fighting to survive. The author wrote and stated “My father swallowed my ration” (Wiesel 50). Based on this, I can infer that Elie was helping Mr.Wiesel build up strength by feeding him his ration, also wanted his father to eat his rations for the sake of not wanting to lose his father. In the same way, Mr.Wiesel would have done the same thing and fed Elie his rations.
Elie would give his rations of soup and bread to his father, so he could stay strong and survive. When they were in Buchenwald, the sick could not leave bed, and were not given soup or bread. Elie wanted to be near his father, "For a
His father, Shlomo Wiesel, becomes very weak while in Auschwitz, and Elie has to take extra care of him. Shlomo nearly starves Elie by taking his daily rations of food and is in constant need of Elies rescue, making him more of a burden than a help. When Shlomo, Elie’s father, first becomes sicker (and weaker) Elie starts to give him extra portions of his own food.
Kaiden Sheridan Mrs.Browne English December, 20, 2022 Rhetorical Analysis Paragraph In Night, Eliezer Wiesel’s autobiographical memoir, the rhetorical devices simile and hyperbole describe Elie’s father, conveying the message of hope being coherent with mental health and instilling ideas of despair, the relatable emotion that resides with me the greatest. For example, Elie returning to the medical area after the bread distribution and finding his father “weeping like a child” leads me to believe that the mental torment of concentration camps takes a toll on the well being of Elie’s father, representing the reprocussions of dehumanization(79). I think that Elie’s father cries because people treat him worse than he usually expects. This
When they arrived at Buchenwald, he fell very ill. Elie’s and his father received barely any food to eat, but Elie always gave a small portion of his meal to his father. Despite if he was starving, he always put his father’s health before his health. But after the blockalteste talked to him and said he couldn’t save his father, Elie
Throughout the text, Wiesel creates a sense of routine in the camps when he presents what the daily life of Elie is like to establish the struggle they go through in their new daily life. To present this, Wiesel writes about Elie’s life and his experience during his time in Auschwitz. He states, “In the mornings: black coffee. At midday: soup. By the third day, I was eagerly eating any kind of s o u p ...
When they first arrived at Auschwitz Elie and his father looked to each other for support and survival, Sometimes Elie’s father being the only thing keeping him alive. In their old community Elie’s father was a strong-willed and respected community leader, as the book went on you could see how the roles were becoming reversed he was becoming weaker and more reliant on Elie to take care of him. Their father son bond had always been strong and only grew stronger with the things they had to endure. “My God, Lord of the Universe, give me strength never to do what Rabbi Eliahou’s son has done” Elie was disgusted when he saw Rabbi Eliahou’s son abandon his father to help improve his chances of his survival he prayed he’d never do such a thing, but as his father becoming progressively more reliant on Elie he started to see his father as more of a burden than anything else.
At times, as described in the novel, Elie contemplated taking his dying father's rations of food for himself. “I thought deep down, not daring to admit it to myself. Too late to save your old father… You could have two rations of bread, two rations of soup.” (Wiesel
That nigh the soup tasted of corpses”. Elie Wiesel used to be a vivacious person- always seeking God’s presence- but from the commence of this genocide he has been negatively impacted. God used to be his everything; his strength and his mellifluous song that comforted his very soul. However, all that he is dependent on now is bread and water-
Family; a blessing, or a curse? In the book Night, Elie Wiesel offers many significant themes, but the question, “is family a blessing or a curse,” is one of the most prevalent and begging themes in the novel. During the novel, Wiesel often questions if he should try and keep his father around, or if life would just be better without him in the picture. “‘Don’t let me find him! If only I could get rid of this dead weight, so that I could use all my strength to struggle for my own survival, and only worry about myself,’ I immediately felt ashamed of myself, ashamed forever,” (Wiesel, 111).
Think of a circumstance where you were so hungry and thirsty, that you did not even care to think about your father anymore. That circumstance goes against common father-son relationships. The common father-son motif is where the father looks out and cares for the son. In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he explains why the circumstances around a father-son relationship can change their relationship, whether it 's for the better or the worse. Since the book is about the life of Elie in a Nazi concentration camp, the circumstances were harsh and took a toll on multiple father-son relationships.
For every individual, it is difficult to give up two than one. In the novel Night, by Elie Wiesel, Elie magnanimously inputs his blood and sweat by sacrificing his strength and rations for the survival of his father. He holds unconditional hopes of believing that he will be able to make not only himself survive through the brutal camps under German control, but also his father through his efforts. Through this, Elie uses the relationship with his father to suggest that individuals should be independent for better survival because it is more efficient to create a single, strong individual rather than two weak ones. Elie may have continuously helped his father in lengthening his endurance, but failed to straighten his father’s will.
When Stein, Elie’s relative, was told by the Wiesel’s that his wife and two sons were still alive, he was so grateful that “from time to time, [he] [brought]” Elie and his father “a half portion of bread” (44). This highlights that by lying to Stein, it earned food for the Wiesel's and helped Elie and his father live. A second example is when Elie was liberated on April 10th, the thing the free thought about was “only of bread” (115). All the former prisoners cared about was food, not their family or revenge. These two quotes demonstrate how people are greedy, only thinking about food.
In his memoir, Elie Wiesel writes, “Since my father's death, nothing mattered to me anymore” (113), showing that his reason for living had left him. He also states that he had “only one desire: to eat. [He] no longer thought of [his] father…” (113), which allows the reader to comprehend that with no reason to live, instinct had taken over. Somehow, he indifferently fought to survive, but it was very clear that his beliefs on life had changed
Bread in Night Bread, you may not think of it, but in the book Night, it becomes crucial through the events. In Night, the word “bread” was used multiple times throughout the book. Now bread is just food, but sometimes, depending on people’s hierarchy of needs, it can be more than food. Bread can be food, a luxury, it can represent normality, friends and family together.
When “a piece fell into [his] wagon, [he] decided not to move” (Wiesel 101), setting up a point of view in which Elie was able to spectate upon a specific moment of “an old man dragging himself on all fours.” Looking closer, “he was holding [bread] to his heart… a shadow had lain down beside him, and threw itself over him… the old man way crying: ‘Meir, my little Meir! Don’t you recognize me… you’re killing your father… I have bread… for you too…“ (Wiesel 101-102). The imagery in this scene shows the extent at which these people are willing to go for the smallest amount of sustenance. Wiesel makes the scene even more dramatically traumatizing when he informs the reader that “Two men had been watching him [the son], and jumped him…