How Does Elie Wiesel Use Dehumanization In The Book Night

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Amid the time of World War II, the Jewish people were brutally assaulted and diminished. Elie Wiesel the author of Night uses him and his father’s own personal encounters through concentration camps to further demonstrate Jew’s mistreatment. The memoir is about a boy and his father’s journey of survival through concentration camps during the war; Jews are being persecuted and starved in camps hoping for someone to save them. In Night, Wiesel uses dehumanization to show that Jews are treated so badly that their humanity is taken away from them. Correspondingly, in the beginning of the story, Wiesel uses dehumanization to show how the Jews are being treated like animals. When Elie and his family are being transported to concentration camps they are put into cattle cars: “The Hungarian police made us climb into …show more content…

When Elie’s father asked where the toilets were, he was beaten in front of his son: “My father had just been struck, in front of me, and I had watched and kept silent” (Wiesel 39). Here while Elie sees his father attacked, he not only stays silent, but he also feels nothing about it. This shows that Elie has become dehumanized, his only concern is his own survival; because of the Nazis treatment towards them. Gradually throughout his time in the camps, the hunger, the fear, and the physical, mental and religious abuse, cause the Jews to further lose their humanity. Elie’s only concern in life now is soup and bread: “At that moment in time, all that mattered to me was my daily bowl of soup, my crust of stale bread.” (Wiesel 52). After losing his only possession, he no longer cares about anything except for his daily meal. The Jew's time in the concentration camps took their human qualities, thereby caring for nobody but himself and thinking that it is every man for

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