Symbolism Of Night In Elie Wiesel's Novel Night

880 Words2 Pages

THE MADNESS

By Douglas Schoedl
Class Period 1
English Honors II

Douglas Schoedl

Raven Shine

English II

May 18, 2014

‘Alright class, we will be discussing the overall symbolism of Night is Elie Wiesel’s

novel Night’, said Ms. Shine. Through the class period, many students to my surprise were

claiming complex and comprehensive thoughts on the subject. Danny had just finished talking

about his thesis statement on now the spotlight was shining in my direction. I panicked and

hectically searched for my response within my paper struggling to decipher my awful doctors

handwriting. My mind went calm and exhaled a thankful sigh. Every one fell quite after I stated

“Night is a symbolic word that Elie Wiesel used to portray the madness which robbed him of his

mind and loved ones in his extended stay in Nazi concentration camps.”

Elie was a young teenager at the time of the Holocaust. Being young it was difficult for

him to understand the situation and all the events that were occurring. As a matter of fact many

of the Jewish living in his community understood the situation but repeatedly made excuses to

comfort themselves. This ignorance led the city to be occupied by the Nazis and the forced

movement into small imprisonments called ghettos. Even after being imprisoned most of the

Jewish thought they would be safe and the soviets would break through the Nazis. Sadly as in

most other cases they were horribly wrong. A few weeks after being forced into ghettos the

Nazis began deporting the Jewish to special areas in overcrowded and unsanitary cattle cars. Its

ironic how these cars were used for cattle and the people were treated worse ...

... middle of paper ...

... survivors tell the story of the tragedies of all the lost in the Holocaust. A murder on

the industrial scale gave new meaning to mass murder. Actually after WWII a new definition

called genocide was created. This was the entire or attempted irradication of an entire population

or race. Although this was not the first Holocaust it is the one that the world remembers for we

must never forget. The mistakes that we no the world made should never happen again. Man,

Woman or child shared equal fates in the evil plan of the Nazis. And its because of this that the

survivors tell us this tragedy that remains us of the lost and fallen. We must correct our

mistakes as a human race and ensure nothing of this caliber or anything near this happens

again for this should never happen again. Never again.

Wiesel, Elie. New York City: Hill & Wang, 1960. Print.

Open Document