When they arrived at the camp, Elie and his father were separated from the rest of their family. As Elie lost his faith in God, his father became the only source of hope and encouragement in his life. When they stopped in the abandoned village during their march to Gleiwitz, both Elie and his father would have succumbed to the cold and the temptation of sleep had they not been together. “I 'll watch over you and you 'll watch over me. We won 't let each other fall asleep.…
Seeing this happen really put things into perspective and showed Elie that he would not be able to make the rest of the journey without either his father or his…
Early on in the book, Elie was very close with his dad, but as the book progresses his relationship veers with his father. At the beginning, Elie’s only purpose…
"He rarely displayed his feelings, not even within his family, and was more involved with the welfare of others than that of his own kin. " Elie is aware of his father's concern for others before his own family, and he greatly resented it. " Look, take this knife," he said to me. " I don't need it any longer. It might be useful to you.…
Throughout the novel, Elie continually fights his own morality. In the height of the Holocaust, Elie, as a small child, and his father were taken to a concentration camp where he and his father both were firm in their faith in God.…
Some people can and will do what Is least expected just for their own survival. Some people might leave behind people whom are dragging them down. Some people will try to find any possible way survive without losing the ones around them. Survival is key, and people will do anything no matter the cost nor suffrage.…
Elie is left with nothing but his father and his hope that they would soon leave the camp. As time goes on at the camp, Elie, his father, and many other Jews are worked to death and mistreated causing the majority of them…
Elie and his father were really close; being with his father was what kept Elie moving forward. It gave Elie hope, and Elie hoped being with his dad after everything was gone; sadly Elie's father did not make it out alive. " No prayers were said over his tomb. No candles were lit in his memory. His last word had been my name.…
Elie’s faith stemmed from his father being held with high regard in the Jewish community. From that perspective, Elie must be observant of Judaism, furthermore Elie said, “by day I studied Talmud and by night I would run to the synagogue to weep over the destruction of the Temple” (Wiesel 3). This quote gives off a sense that Elie is a very religious person, especially coming from such a young person. Elie looked up to his dad since he was held up to the highest esteem among everyone in the Jewish community of Sightet, but was not a man to show his feelings to his family. His dad tried to be strong for Elie as long as he could for the sake of Elie’s survival.…
Elie revealed to the readers that he was somewhat relieved that his father had died. Elie and his father were very close. They always protected each other. During the Holocaust, he was only focused on survival, and having his father gone allowed him to just focus on protecting himself. If someone else wrote a book about Elie’s experience in the Holocaust, readers would have most likely never known this piece of information, because it was something Elie thought to himself.…
“My hand tightened its grip on my father. All i could think of was not to lose him. Not to remain alone”(30). Elie was already in extreme fear, being separated from his mother, and now his biggest concern was losing his…
“Dehumanization is the process by which the Nazis gradually reduced the Jews to little more than “things” which were a nuisance to them.” For this reason, the conditions in the concentration camps were gradually taking away Eliezer’s every quality and attributes that made him human. For example, in the novel Night, Elie lost his sense of self during the Holocaust through his suffering and despair because his identity gets stripped away, he lost his connection and his faith in God, and he no longer cared about anyone but his own survival. The first example of how Elie lost his sense of self during the Holocaust was when his identity was stripped away.…
After hearing these bold words, Elie’s feelings change as he has a realization that he can only survive if he goes on alone. Elie understands that surviving requires selfish thinking, and it is “everyman for himself” when trying to stay alive in the adverse conditions of the camps. Elie must not “think about others” because the thoughts will only slow him down and handicap him in the long run. He has to put everything out of his mind, “even [his] father” who has played a large role in his life and survival so far. At the start…
Although Elie wants to give all his time and energy to help his father get better, the head of the block is telling him that it does not matter that he is his father, he needs to focus on himself. It is survival of the fittest in these concentration camps and even though no one wants to fight alone they almost have too. No matter how many times others tell Elie to focus on himself he continues to stay by his father, “he works and prays to maintain the strength not to forsake his father as these other sons did. "I was his only support," he says of his father” (Gale Virtual). A big part of Elies life before the concentration camp was praying and his family always had his back.…
According to Eli, the May Day ball was always held the first Saturday of May. Eli had coaxed and begged until he convinced her to go along with him to both events. “The Andrew’s always throw a great party, Cousin. It will be better than mulling around here hour after hour, worrying over Thomas. Please come along, Allie,” he begged.…