Isolation In Elie Wiesel's Night

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During 1939 to 1945 six million innocent people, primarily jews were gathered like cattle and taken to various death camps. Germany created these camp in order to get rid of those they considered inferior. In the death camps prisoners were starved/worked to death, while others were killed by their captives or even by their own fellow prisoners. Elie Wiesel author of Night one of the many forced into these camps went on to survive and even win the Nobel Peace Prize and presenting one of his most powerful speeches. Night is a memoir which clearly portrays with the power of imagery, ethos, and prisoner experiences during the camps in order to emphasize how they effect of isolation can have a devastating impact on an individual. Wiesel in Night accurately describes how isolation is the reason atrocities …show more content…

Many shrugged off the actions because they were neutral while others were kept in the dark because of how secretive germany was. During the process of transportation many jewish families were split apart resulting in early isolation. Many prisoners would start to go mad of as a result of isolation even going as far as yelling “look at this fire, this terrible fire, have mercy on me”(25) to show how real their visions were to them. Some prisoners experienced isolation early on, while others experienced it after witnessing the atrocities first hand. Elie the main character of Night before arriving saw dark flames that smelled like death coming out of chimneys recognized that “the world is not interested in [them], [and now] anything is possible even the crematorium”(33). After entering the camp Elie saw how babies were used as target practiced resulting in his “soul [being] invaded-and devoured-by a black flame”(37). Elie realizing the world truly was allowing these acts to happen understood that the prisoners really were

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