Elie Wiesel's Night-Dehumanization Of Jews

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Night- Dehumanization of Jews During the time period between World War I and World War II, when Adolf Hitler was a dictator in Germany; he degraded Jews they were persecuted and put into concentration camps. Hitler attempted to eliminate all the Jewish people because according to Hitler Germans were the superior race. In the book Night Elie Wiesel, his father, and his fellow Jews experience inhumane treatment by Germans. Jews were seen as inhumane and Hitler thought that punishing them for being a complete different race other than human was the correct to do. Germans dehumanized Jews by, forcing them out of their homes, separating them from their loved ones, and taking their freedom. For starters, Germans forced Jews out of their homes. First they prohibited from leaving their residences. “Jews were prohibited from leaving their residences for three days under …show more content…

All the men that were left in the concentration camps were tattooed with a number that became their new name. “The three ‘veteran’ prisoners, needles in hand, tattooed numbers on our left arms. I became A-7713. From then on,I had no other name” (Wiesel 38). They did not have the freedom, the liberty of an actual name. They also did not have freedom of where they wanted to be they had to stay in the camps or they would die. They were brutally tortured and the Germans took all they had.
All in all, Germans dehumanized Jews which reduced them to little more than “things.” Germans forced Jews out of their homes, separated them from their loved ones, and took away their freedom. The book Night Elie Wiesel as well as other Jews were made less over the rules of Hitler. In the end it always comes to racism and how everyone sees their world differently. Elie Wiesel is one of the few survivors of the awful dehumanization to

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