Analysis Of Elie Wiesel's Night

1819 Words4 Pages

Elie Wiesel stated in the conclusion of his book, Night, “From the depths of the mirror, a corpse was contemplating me. The look in his eyes as he gazed at me never left.” (115). Troops and veterans often return home from war in different mental and physical states than when originally deployed. What society fails to realize is that a majority of men and women have and will return home physically, but not necessarily mentally. When Elie described the view of himself when glancing in a mirror for the first time in years, it opens our eyes to the reality of becoming emotionally drained and “dead” from traumatic experiences. Families expecting a soldier to soon return boast at what they view as a miracle. However, most do not realize that numerous …show more content…

The draft was utilized in order to deploy men because many citizens were anti-war when it came to Vietnam. Horrendous sights such as young children being tortured and stripped of their innocence were recorded behind the lense of multiple cameras. An unknown photographer was able to capture a photograph exhibiting a family with multiple children who each have a portrayal of desperation (Vietnam War). It became clear that these victims had decided to give up in hope and chosen to weep because they had witnessed such traumatic experiences that they felt as though they had nothing left. Those who returned home from this particular war had been dismantled mentally and the “psychological nightmare rages on even 40 years after” (Handwerk). Images and memories of their experiences haunted the minds of the survivors and made it hard to recover from what had been done to them, even in the years to follow. Disorders like PTSD were extremely common in returning Vietnam soldiers and it led the majority of them to go insane and be unfit to carry on with life; this led them to become emotionally dead to their family and environment because they could not escape their nightmares and felt unworthy because of their inability to

Open Document