Critical Analysis Of Night By Elie Wiesel

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Before reading Wiesel’s novel Night one would be convinced that this would be a novel about hate and revenge towards those who committed such horrific acts to the Jews. However, this novel is extraordinary it depicts so many strong messages in such a powerful voice. As readers, we are put on an emotional journey as we read about the Eliezer’s journey during the Holocaust. Due to the extreme reality that happened in Auschwitz’s our belief in a peaceful humankind is forever shaken. Although, Wiesel’s stories mainly focus on death as he witnesses many acts of murder, and ultimately, the world is seen as deadbeat, this doesn’t stop the novel from sending knowledge upon the reader. This novel takes a turn from the typical book we are all use to, the book that shows us a happy ending and gives us a resolution to all our problems. Instead this novel challenges our ability to being human, it makes us think out side of the box and question our flesh and blood. The novel may end in sadness and despair but considering …show more content…

I think this sentence is very sincere because it presents the truth. Due to the power of his memory, he is able to present this novel to the world so that his experiences can be implanted, in their memory therefore, resulting in a continuous cycle of remembering the Holocaust from generation to generation. He further explains that he has “tried to keep memory alive, that [he] [has] tried to fight those who would forget” because “if we forget, we are guilty, we are accomplices” (118). He is absolutely right, due to him preserving his memory, he is able to express his past in a novel that all of humanity can benefit from. His power of memory of the Holocaust resulted in a act of presenting moral principles and

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