Elie Wiese's Dangerous and Frightening Life in Night

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During 1944, Europe was a very dangerous place to grow up in. Adolf Hitler,who was the leader of Nazi Germany had a vendetta to take out the Jewish inhabitants of Europe and all over the world. So being a Jew in any European country was a constant struggle of persecution and fear, because Hitler had absolutely no remorse and would do whatever it took to take out the Jewish religion. Elie Wiesel was a young boy growing up in the small town of Sighet, Hungary. He was very religious and spent much of his own time studying the Talmud and reading into the Jewish religion. He was an ambitious character and had very little hate for anyone, he also was very open minded and very compassionate for all those around him. But when the Nazis first take his family to the ghettos that they moved all Jews of Sighet too, he first began to hate and feel the pain of persecution. He was then also separated from his mother Sarah, and his three sisters Hilda, Beatrice, and Tzipora when he and his father were sent to Auschwitz where his inmate number was “A-7713”. During his time at this concentration camp he first began to question his belief in God and his belief in the good of humanity. Elie survived the Holcaust but he had suffered the horrors of watching people die right in front of him, and the loss of religion and his family. A major contributor to the religious spirituality of Elie was the handyman of the town of Sighet, Moshe the Beadle. Moshe taught Elie much about the Jewish religion and was a very well liked figure of the community. But one day unexpectedly, Moshe was expelled from Sighet because he was a foreign Jew. No one knew where he was taken, but later it was rumored they were sent to Galicia to work, and that they were content wi... ... middle of paper ... ...tation of losing faith in a higher power when you are faced with the opportunity, and I realize how hard it is to watch someone you care about become weak and powerless and know you can do nothing about it. I believe Mr. Hulbert had us read this book, to gain an understanding of darkness of this time. Having a survivors story helps us to gain knowledge of the wrong doings of the Nazis and what the Jews had to go through. This book not only shows us the facts and the steps but also the personal lives of those that were prisoners in these camps. Many prisoners faced the evil of the Nazis and lost family members, and their own peace of mind because of the effects of the camps. The survivors of the holocaust never would be able to be the same because of the darkness of that time, and this story perfectly describes the darkness the prisoners were under and affected by.

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