Themes In Night By Elie Wiesel

1599 Words4 Pages

In the 1940s under the rule of Adolf Hitler, German soldiers caused great destruction throughout Europe. Elie Wiesel, a young boy at the time, was caught in the traumatic crossfire of the devastation occurring in that time period. The memoir, Night, tells the horrific stories that Elie Wiesel experienced. Elie was forced into concentration camps with his dad where he soon had to grow up fast to face the reality of his new life filled with violence, inhumanity and starvation, many of which he had never endured before. In Elie Wiesel’s novel Night he validates his theme of violence and inhumane treatment toward Jews through the use of excessive force such as the brutal beating to show Eliezer that he should not have been roaming the camp and When Moishe had returned to Sighet he had told the terrible story of what went on when he had been taken away by the German soldiers. He explained, "They were forced to dig huge trenches. When they had finished their work, the men from the Gestapo began theirs. Without passion or hate, they shot their prisoners, who were forced to approach the trenches one by one and offer their necks. Infants were tossed into the air and used as targets for the machine guns."(Wiesel 6). The Jews were scared and frightened by the Germans, they listened to everything they had told them to do in fear of dying. The soldiers had the life of the Jews in their hands and without regret ended many of the lives. The people of Moishe 's community could not comprehended that one could be so cruel thus dismissed his story. Such horror had never been heard of and therefore could not have been conceived. The human brain was not able to fathom that other humans were capable of such atrocities, such as using an infant as a flying target for machine guns. As for other Jews who are being taken into the camps they didn 't know what was yet to come. "They will not be killed (not yet) but the terror this welcome..."("Themes and construction: Night"). German soldiers had a duty and it was it exterminate as many Jews as possible. Many of the Jews were frightened and blindsided to what they were in store for, little did they know that terror will become a part of their daily lives. "Behind me, an old man fell to the ground. Nearby, an SS man replaced his revolver in its holster."(Wiesel 30). There was no reason to shoot the man, he wasn 't doing anything different than the other had been doing. Elizer had been walking with his father and others in the line when he had realized that him or his dad could be the next to be killed. The amount of terror that anyone had

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