Practice Free Response Question #10 The novel Night, written by Elie Wiesel, offers a look into the depths of the horrors of the Holocaust from the perspective of someone who experienced it all. The images that were conjured up into my mind as I read were so powerful, yet disturbing all at the same time. Every word kept me infatuated with Elie’s story, even until the very end. The last two lines of the novel, “From the depths of the mirror, a corpse was contemplating me.…
Or that day, when, finally, they believed in themselves. Many things can come, but once that seed of faith is planted, people will always remember it. This denial of faith, however, is not new. In the memoir of night, Elie Wiesel is thrown into the middle of the holocaust. Through his experiences he denies his faith in God and begins to lose hope in himself.…
In Night, Elie Wiesel’s experiences with brutality among the guards, his fellow inmates, and ultimately himself cause his strong faith in God to weaken as time goes on. One reason Elie's faith was weakened during the Holocaust was because the brutality…
In his memoir Night, Elie Wiesel develops his own character to show how a person’s faith cannot be true until it has been tested. Wiesel begins the story as an adolescent devoted to his religion and concludes the book as a man with no God. Early in the book, he describes his life before the camps, in which he studies the Talmud by day, and, at night, runs “over to the synagogue to weep over the destruction of the temple.” (1) Wiesel has a peaceful life centered around his utmost dedication to God before he ever sets foot in the Nazi concentration camps, and there is nothing to deter his faith. Because there are no obstacles in the way of his faith, it is not in any way sincere or profound.…
Elie and his father were never close before they were taken to the concentration camps, and as much as the camps tore apart families, it actually brought Elie and his father closer together. Mr. Wiesel was never too involved with his own family, he was very passionate about helping others. While in the concentration camps,the two survived off of each other and it created a solid bond between the two, that wasn’t there in Sighet. When Elie’s father became ill with Dysentery, Elie took care of him as best he could and spent every second he could with him. When the camp was traveling to Buchenwald, Elie cared for his father, as he watched the Rabbi search frantically for his son, and his son try and escape from his father.…
In his memoir “Night” Elie Wiesel writes of his experience during the Holocaust, and how he questions God and begins to lose faith in god for allowing all these terrible things to happen to them. Elie is very religious and believes in his faith wholeheartedly in the beginning of the story. After Elie and his father arrive in Birkenau, Elie begins feeling questionable with his feelings on God after seeing how horrible the men were being treated. Eliezer thinks about commiting suicide by throwing himself on the electric wire instead of being be burned alive, but Elie and his father are assigned to labor units, during the night Eliezer loses faith in God’s justice and mercy.…
Picture devoting your life to being faithful to a religion, only to experience such a detrimental event that it completely alters your faith. The Holocaust was an event known to have such an effect on people. In 20th century Germany, Nazis rose to power, and saw the Germans as the superior race and the Jews as inferior to all others. Millions of Jews were then forced from their ghettos or homes to labor at concentration camps, and were starved nearly to death.…
The Holocaust was a horrifying event that involved the murder of over 6,000,000 innocent people. Few people survived this terrorizing event, and those who did live with the memories of pain and suffering. One of these individuals is Elie Wiesel, who wrote the haunting novel, Night. This novel is an account of the horrible events that took place during the Holocaust and how the author, Wiesel, was resilient and able to overcome the overwhelming adversities of dwindling health, his faith in God, death, and the separation from his family.…
The Holocaust inspired many works of art such as the memoir Night and the poem “Mercy and Grace,” which both show how faith and religion declined with the Jewish people, with the more suffering, and torture they endured. For example, in the memoir Night, by Elie Wiesel, a Jewish citizen of Sighet, and a Holocaust survivor, is watching the world slowly drip into chaos. Often times in his society, people are being dragged to concentration camps, and their families are separated. Then, as Wiesel arrives at the camp, where he is intoxicated by the smell of death surrounding the atmosphere, he starts to lose hope in life, and in God. While Wiesel lives in the camps, his faith is slowly being tested until he runs out of hope.…
The Holocaust was an event in history that truly tested people’s perseverance and faith. During these times of struggle, many Jews looked to God and their religion. The will of the Jews was tested to the full extent, and those who found the light of hope had a motive to survive. The author of Night, Elie Wiesel, demonstrates his struggle in the transition from faith in God to faith in himself. Although Elie loses faith in the idea of a covenant with God, his focus shifts to a covenant with himself to survive After witnessing countless acts of barbarism that go unpunished, Elie’s belief in a just God is shaken.…
The harsh and dreadful conditions of one’s setting or surrounding can drastically affect the way that person thinks and acts towards certain topics. Through the condensed memoir entitled Night, written by Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, it is evident that Elie’s tough and emotional journey affects the person he becomes towards the end and after his exposure to the concentration camps. The novel illustrates how the numerous monstrosities Elie endures through his times at the camps change him into the person he is today. Elie explains through his in depth analysis of his experiences that horrifying conditions in the nightmarish concentration camps of the Holocaust can reach and shatter the concerns and ideals held close to a person’s heart. Throughout…
During World War II, many atrocities occurred to the Jews living all across Europe. Hitler created huge concentration camps so devastating they were stated to be “hell on earth.” The story of Elie Wiesel is a truly horrifying and emotional journey. During his stay in a selection of concentration camps, he has lost faith in his fellow man, god, and himself; making him nothing more than a mere skeleton of the young man he used to be. The book Night Wrote by Elie Wiesel himself is a personal reflection of the pains suffered during the Holocaust.…
“Were there still miracles on this earth?” (76). Elie Wiesel, the author and main character of the book Night, spoke and breathed these words when he was in the horrific hands of the famous leader, Adolf Hitler. In 1944, Elie Wiesel and his family are forced out of their hometown and into forced labor camps called concentration camps. Elie and his father are strong Judaism believers, especially Elie, who prays every day and would give anything to be loyal to God.…
“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.…
Throughout the entirety of humanity, faith plays a vital role in determining one’s identity and character. This is portrayed especially well throughout the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, wherein Elie is constantly conflicted with the idea of a benevolent god. Within the memoir, faith is a consistent and recurring theme which drives the life and characterization of the author throughout the unbelievably inhumane events which are the Holocaust. These incredibly horrid incidences deeply change Elie, forcing him to question his own faith and well-being. As the piece progresses, Elie’s belief becomes shaped by the dehumanization of the Jews, the injustice that is imposed upon him and his family, and his own growing independence.…