Buchenwald concentration camp

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    Losing faith is like a diminishing flame that slowly dies out. Elie Wiesel’s novel Night depicts the use of this principle. Wiesel uses the motif of faith to help develop multiple themes throughout the novel. A prominent theme reveals itself in the hardships that Wiesel and his father face. A tremendous impact upon one’s belief causes turmoil. Ultimately, faith is put to the test and lost during times of suffering. Wiesel begins to support his theme of the departure of faith when he…

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    from their concentration camps, Elie would have been seventeen years old. The events that Elie endured, at the Auschwitz concentration camp, inspired him after the war to start writing. Elie was the Author of 57 books and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his work. The Norwegian Noble Committee even went as far as calling him a messenger to mankind. At the Noble Peace Prize awards ceremony, Elie Weisel gave a speech describing his experience at the Auschwitz concentration camp in…

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    had saved around a thousand lives, although he wished that he had saved more lives, Oskar had to go into hiding. In Night Elie took care of his sick dad and tried to save him, the text read “listen to me, kid. Don’t forget that you are in a concentration camp. In this place, it is every man for himself, and you can not think of others. Not even your father”(Wiesel 110). Elie is saving his father, protecting him as long as he could but Shlomo, Elie's father, died and Elie didn’t have to try to…

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    Morality It is a human instinct to prioritize their own well being before others. We are constantly confronted with situations where we as humans have to take action for our own well being. In the book, “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he shares his own traumatic experience of the Holocaust. The Holocaust was a genocide of 12 million people, such as Jews, gypsies, homosexuals, basically anyone who is different and wouldn’t fit into Adolf Hitler’s image of a perfect society. This…

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    Simon Wiesenthal’s memoir, The Sunflower, told the story of Simon when he was trapped in a concentration camp. During his time in the camp, he was told to make a decision of forgiving a SS officer. An officer who Wiesenthal was contributing to his daily torture. Instead of verbally saying he forgave Karl, Simon implied his forgiveness by staying silent. I agree with Wiesenthal’s actions because I have relatable instances from my life that make it understandable. Such as, my parent’s divorce and…

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    dehumanization generates the potential for unchallenged obscenities. Two texts that display great examples of this are Maus by Art Spiegelman, and Night Elie Wiesel. Night can be described as simply a story of a fifteen-year-old boy going through concentration camps. Maus is a graphic novel telling the story of a man talking to his father about World War II. The concept of Maus presents a powerful metaphor; all of the characters in the novel are portrayed as animals, Jews as mice and Germans as…

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    these issues are illustrated through the eye of a Nazi Soldier’s family who have to move to Poland after the soldier becomes commandant of the Auschwitz concentration camp. In a place where the soldier’s son whose name is Bruno comes into contact with a Jewish child named Shmuel, who is on the other side of the fence in the concentration camp. Bruno tries to understand both sides of the story, the Nazi side as well as the Jewish side, but believes he is superior to Shmuel, only because he is…

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    because the Jews were oblivious to the fact that Hitler was trying to obliterate this social class. It took Elie many years to move past what had happened to him in the concentration camps, but once he did, he was able to stop concerning himself with the pain and suffering that he had to experience within the concentration camps and continue on with his life in a happier mindset. For instance, Elie says, “That I survived the Holocaust and went on to love beautiful girls, to talk, to write, to…

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    Faith is confidence or trust in an otherworldly being, person, thing or an obligation of loyalty. Before the Holocaust the Jewish communities throughout Europe continued to practice their faith and their faith in humanity as well. When the Holocaust took its grasp on the world, it broke down people and simultaneously made people stronger. The effect of this on the Jewish Communities differed from community to community, but the overall fact of it all was that some took it on themselves as a way…

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    until the Nazi soldiers came to collect him, along with his family and friends as a teenager. The gathered Jewish people from his community were sent to Auschwitz Concentration Camp where many devastating events took place in the life of Wiesel and thousands of other Jews. Wiesel later moved to do incredible things, surviving the camp, writing dozens of successful poems and books, and becoming a social rights advocate around the world. (Berenbaum, n.p) His course through life influenced all of…

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