DBQ How would you feel if you weren’t allowed to eat at certain restaurants ,or even drink out of certain water fountains? You wouldn't feel like you had freedom would you? All three men fought against unjust laws to get the civil rights they also all fought peacefully they did not use any violence and fought for their right n boycott marches . All three men also accepted jail time without any hesitation because they knew they were fighting for their freedom. Breaking laws allowed nonviolence to work.…
Author, Parker Palmer, in the prelude to his book, “Healing the Heart of Democracy,” discusses the state of our nation. Throughout the prelude, he identifies key problems with our society that create “darkness,” and he gives many ways for us to resolve these obstacles in order to “see the light.” Palmer’s purpose is to unite citizens together so that they can understand each other and create a better society. Palmer describes the “dark” of our world in a variety of ways. He begins by discussing the perils that democracy faces which lead to his own personal struggles.…
History is a subject based on story telling. Sometimes, it is based off letters and written documents. History is not written down for others to learn in a nonbiased opinion in the present moment. Historians must go through these documents later and decide what is biased, and what is not. They must read about an event from multiple perspectives and try and pick out what happened and what is an opinion.…
In the book, Night, by Elie Wiesel describes the hardship of the Holocaust through his own eyes. While in the camp, Elie experienced many situations that gives him a larger outlook on life and builds his power. In the passage on page 37, Wiesel demonstrates the difficult times in the camp through metaphoric use and imagery. First, he uses a metaphor to give a feeling of what shape the prisoners were in.…
In the book Night, by Eliezer Wiesel, he describes what he experiences and what he sees during the holocaust. He sees the battle between bad and good. He witnesses many lost battles and defeated souls. Elie learns many things about others and himself. He sees people that show kindness while they are in the camps.…
The theme that challenging times reveal one’s true values and beliefs is expressed in Elie Wiesel’s book “Night” by using the motif of religion and faith. For example, Elie admits his change of faith by saying “The student of Talmud, the Child I was, had been consumed by the flames. All that was left was a shape that resembles me. My soul had been invaded - and devoured - by a black flame.” Worshipping God had once been Elie Wiesel’s focal point to his entire life, his greatest desire was to devote his entire life to Him.…
As one of the most iconic American poets, Robert Frost’s work has stood the test of time. Though born in California, Frost moved to New England at age eleven and came to identify himself as a New Englander. That self-identification would become a staple of his later works as he would invest “in the New England terrain” and make use of the “simplicity of his images” (Norton Anthology, p. 727) accompanied by uncomplicated writing to give his poems a more natural feel. Frost’s poems were generalized by certain types: nature lyrics, which described a scene or event, dramatic narratives or generalizations, and humorous or sardonic works. His widely anthologized poem “Fire and Ice” falls between the categories of nature lyrics while also being somewhat…
Mahatma Gandhi and Osama Bin Laden, Polar Opposites Two very influential leaders in their times, both leaders had goals of driving out foreign influence from their nations. But this is the only thing they have in common, as both employed drastically different methods of achieving this. Through non-violence or Ahimsa, Gandhi achieved independence for India without dealing a single blow, while Bin Laden relied mostly on violence, or Jihad, and fear to drive western influence out of the Middle East, leaving a path of destruction across the globe.…
Elie Wiesel's Character Analysis In the novel Night, Elie Wiesel goes to a concentration camp with his father and endure many hardships of being in the midst of World War II and being a Jew. Elie goes from a spiritual emotional young man to a closed off unempathetic atheist man. In the beginning of the memoir Elie thinks, believes, and feels entirely differently from the Elie we see in chapter 5.…
“From the depths of the mirror, a corpse was contemplating me. The look in his eyes as he gazed at me has never left me” (pg.115). The Holocaust was the systematic murder of more than six million Jews that Adolf Hitler organized. During this time, envision being entirely alone without anyone to turn to, not even God himself. In the memoir Night written by Elie Wiesel, a son and father experience the unimaginable.…
In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, it is told from the authors point of view and how the Holocaust not only affected him as an individual but others as well. Wiesel talks about how such a horrific event could happen to such incent people. As well as the disturbing events that had occur during this time period in history. He talks about how he had been separated from his mother and sisters, which left, him and his father to fight to stay alive. The book talks about how the only thing that had been keeping many alive during that time was ‘Hope’.…
“My personal faith is absolutely clear. I cannot intentionally hurt anything that lives, much less fellow-human beings even though they may do the greatest wrong to me and mine. Whilst therefore I hold the British rule to be a curse, I do not intend harm a single Englishman or any legitimate interest he may have in India. "(Lines 3-8 in the Letter to Viceroy, Lord Irwin) Gandhi’s strong belief of Jainism has strengthened his morals and ethics creating his non nonaggressive personality.…
Life is all about finding a balance, to get what you need—perhaps in sacrifice of what you want. Thus, history has its reckless balance of tragedy and hope through varying events; testing the strength of humanity in the face of adversity. In “Night” by Elie Wiesel, we glimpse the horrors of the Holocaust through the recollections of a survivor. Elie supplies an emotional recount of his experience, enabling his readers to comprehend the devastating repercussions of this event vicariously. He presents a personal vantage point, causing us to read about families getting ripped apart and demoralized victims losing their faith.…
“I have come to the conclusion that the most important element in human life is faith” ( Rose Kennedy). Bereft of faith, one is merely an empty shell who strives for nothing in life. Elie Wiesel uses Night to comment on the effects of the Holocaust that cause the loss of his faith. Elie Wiesel, once a religiously dedicated child, endures anguish and suffering in the concentration camps, which leads to the wavering of his belief in God and ultimately the destruction of it, transforming him into a soulless corpse. Religion was a crucial part of Elie’s life; however, when he first experiences the horrors from the Holocaust, the meaning of religion for him gradually changes.…
By stating that if failing to be nonviolent he will have failed God, which makes his audience feel a sense of guilt and guides them to sympathize with him as a rhetor. Gandhi also fosters feelings and emotional impact in his speech through his use of pathos. He is able to use metaphors and imagery in order to achieve a fear in the audience. Gandhi used personification in his Quit India speech to present an image of the world to show the effect of violence and suffering on a more personal level for his audience by stating “In the present crisis, when the earth is scored by the flames of Hisma and crying out for deliverance” (Gandhi, 1). By reflecting the suffering people in this personified way he was able to warn his audience in a very effective and real way that if they continue on the path of violence it won’t lead to anything besides more suffering and destruction.…