Night By Elie Wiesel

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NIGHT BY ELIE WIESEL

Analysis of Night by Elie Wiesel

Analysis of Night by Elie Wiesel

Introduction

The book begins with the figure of the little Eliezer that discusses mysticism with the old Moshe, the sexton. The story divides on the memories and impressions of the writer Elie Wiesel, who was deported to Auschwitz and later Buchenwald with his family. It is the autobiography of the period that the author has lived since his capture to his liberation from the concentration camps, where many were deported during the Nazi period because of the Jew during the latter part of World War II.

Discussion

There were two facts that were very impressive. First, that a boy had to put in the crematorium's father, the other was the brutality and viciousness of how these poor people got treated. Lousy dogs were called for them, and their identities were just a number. They were frustrated and malnourished soldiers, they were worked to death, and they killed them just because they were Jews. Only a fool would say it was useless that made the amoral world. He tells of how people lived in concentration camps as seen from a 15 year old boy, who had to pretend to be eighteen to work with his father and be able to survive without being wiped out with other kids her age just arrived at the camp. Finally, his father died, and he was freed after several days by the Americans (Dudley, 1997).

While writing this book, Elie Wiesel very sincerely wanted to tell everything that happened. Another inspiring note was that Elie had never abandoned his father he had always helped until the end even when he knew it was useless to him has always. He helped by giving him his ration of soup and bread, while it was very impressive that some child killed his own father, when he beat up a son to kill his father for a ration of bread. Particularly alarming was to see among other things, how clueless the victims of the Holocaust were. The whole time she clung to the hope that they would be freed; the Germans (the front) would be still far away - until finally lost her faith. They came to the camp and had no idea what to expect. So no one had escaped, or hardly had tried it, when they still had the chance. It is difficult to imagine that if something so ...
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