Concentration Camps In Elie Wiesel's Night

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Night Night should be required for high school reading because it talks about all the people that have been deported from homes to the concentration camps, and how one’s experiences were like at the camps. Elie Wiesel, the author of the book Night tells how he was part of the concentration camps as a child and also how people were left there to be treated unfairly, starved, beaten, and eventually to die. In our generation today, people weren’t expelled from houses to a camp that could possibly cost one’s life. However, it was a different story to the Jews from Sighet . In the time of the concentration camps, Jews were forced out of their homes to go to this horrifying place that no one was aware of. A concentration camp that would leave them for death. In the book, Elie Wiesel said that one day all of the Jews, including him and his family, were evacuated from their homes in Sighet as Hungarian police were cramming Jews into cattle cars to be taken into the camps. Jews all around Sighet were being forced to go to camps and not knowing exactly what it was all about. Little did they know, going to the camp was like a graveyard, waiting for the Jews to lay down in the coffin. …show more content…

Elie Wiesel, when he was a child, witnessed horrible actions of the Gestapo. Some of those actions where infants were used as targets for the machine guns, forced Jews to dig up huge trenches while the Gestapo were killing them. And the Gestapo would put the Jews into these specific groups and call the Jews out one by one to see if anyone was able to work. If one wasn’t, it was not a choice that they had to kill them. In other words, no matter what somebody did, one was going to get killed anyway. All of their hard work was for

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