The Horror of the Night

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Night is the true story of what Elie Wiesel went through during World War II. this book was first written in french, in 1955 and then translated english in 1958. during world war II, the jews were naive and hoped for better times. Even though the situation was always getting worse. In night, Wiesel describes elements of the war that any survivor knew about. he shows us how before the war nobody could imagine such horrible events occurring. the book sends a message stating that everything bad was happening around them the jews were still hoping for better times. Wiesel shows us that still believed in humanity, they did not think such bad events can occur and how even though they had multiple chance of escaping they did not. Night is a true story of a young boy, Eliezer, experiencing world war II as a jew. his terrible journey started in Sighet, Romania where he gets separated from all the women in his family, leaving him only with his dad. with him he will survive to all the concentration camps he was sent to like Auschwitz, Buna and Buchenwald still continuing to fight for the lived through cold, hunger, sadness and sickness. at the end of the war only he survives as his dad dies from exhaustion only a couple of days before the end of the war. Throughout his journey, Eliezer grows to being a man haunted by the death and trauma he witnessed. Wiesel gives his readers an insight about what was war by telling stories that only survivors would know about. events like what happened to Moishe the beadle, when they expelled all o the foreigners of Sighet and brought them to unknown location to kill them, very few people know about it because practically no one survived except for him. Moiche the beadle said to the jews wanted to warn... ... middle of paper ... ...d not want to believe what was really going to happen to them. When Wiesel got to Auschwitz, he heard and saw all the horrors of the war. Still , he had hope in humanity and did not want to believe what was really happening. When he saw the crematorium oven he said “ I did not believe that they could burn people in our age, that humanity would never tolerate it” (P35). But humanity did let it happen and that is why so many people died. To conclude, in “Night” Wiesel brings a testimony of hope, truthfulness and objectivity to people that thankfully do not have to experience what was his horrible world. Hopefully, Humanity learned from their mistake and will never let anything like this happen again. Never Again. Bibliography Wiesel, Elie, and Marion Wiesel. Night. New York, NY: Hill and Wang, a Division of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006. Print.

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