During the Holocaust, in the desperate times of the ‘30s and ‘40s, many people perished in the concentration camps of war. Hundreds upon hundreds of people either died of starvation, beatings, the cold, or were killed in cold blood. This was at a time when the Jewish faith was hated and despised, and Elie Wiesel, along with the many thousands of Jewish people, had to fight to either keep believing or just give up the religion that they had loved for so long. Before all the chaos and agony that was to come, in the beginning, Wiesel had loved his religion and so had his family and his mentor. That changed quickly, because soon after the religious community had been taken to the concentration camps, the Nazi’s would either end the lives of the…