The Horrible Experiences of Holocaust Survivor Elie Wiesel Went Through

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Imagine being pushed and shoved into a cattle car with sixty to ninety strangers and being stuck in this car with little food and water, no room to move, and no place to go to the bathroom for days on end, without knowing when you would be able to go again. Every time someone died, you had to throw them out of the fast, moving train like they were a sack of potatoes. This is what Holocaust survivor and book writer Elie Wiesel went through. Elie's book “Night” goes into detail with what he went through and takes us through the horrific but wonderful journey of his own survival of the Holocaust.
It all started when Hitler became the leader of Germany in 1933. He believed that the German people were of a “superior race” and that they should rule the world. Anyone else that was not German were considered to be an “inferior race.” This was all non-aryan people, including Africans, Slavic’s, and Jewish people (Background Information about World War II...). He took the rights from Jewish people and wanted to diminish them completely (World War 2: A Brief History). In 1938 Hitler ordered that Jews were removed from their homes and moved to the “Ghettos” where they had to live with way too many people and the conditions of living were horrendous. They didn't have enough food, and they didn't have any of the other necessities that they would normally have in their own home. (Background Information about World War II...). They sent the Jews to concentration camps where they were forced to work against their will and they were also sent to gas chambers where they were murdered (Background Information about World War II...). It is estimated that between fifty and seventy million people died during World War 2 and millions of them were Jews (W...

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Works Cited

"Background Information about World War II in Denmark and Europe." Histroy . N.p.. Web. 3 Apr 2014.
Bloom, Harold. "Wiesel, Elie." Bloom's Literature. Facts On File, Inc. Web. 26 Mar. 2014.
Downing, Frederick L. "The Poetics of Memory and Justice: Elie Wiesel and Post-Holocaust Theological Reflection." Bloom's Literature. Facts On File, Inc. Web. 26 Mar. 2014.
"Eliezer Wiesel." 2014. The Biography Channel website. Web. Mar 26 2014, 12:38.
Totten, Samuel. "Entering the "Night" of the Holocaust: Studying Elie Wiesel's Night." Bloom's Literature. Facts On File, Inc. Web. 26 Mar. 2014.
Wiesel, Elie. Night. New York: Hill and Wang, 1958. Print.
Werlock, Abby H. P., ed. "Wiesel, Elie." Bloom's Literature. Facts On File, Inc. Web. 26 Mar. 2014.
"World war 2: A Brief History ." us-history.com. N.p., 13 3 2012. Web. 3 Apr 2014.

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