How Does Elie Wiesel Change In The Book Night

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Did you know you could kill 6,000,000, and capture about another 1 million people in one lifetime? In “Night” Elie Wiesel talks about the life of one of those 7 million people going into detail about the living conditions, and also talking about the experiences in the book that happened to him. The book explains how it felt to be in a concentration camp, and how it changed a person so much you couldn’t tell the difference between the dead and the living. Elie Wiesel is the author and he was only around 15 when this story happened, so this is his story and how the events in the story changed him. So in the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel, the main character , Elie, is affected by the events in the book such as losing faith, becoming immune to death, and emotionally changing throughout the course of the book. Throughout “Night” the main character loses his faith. On page 4 it says “Why do you (Elie) cry when you pray?” which means that he cared so much
For instance “...I would have my nails into this criminal’s flesh… for … my father…” (page 39) to “...I would dream. But only about soup, an extra ration of soup” (page 113). And as stated on page 115, “Our first act as free men was to throw ourselves onto the provisions” even when they were free they only thought about food and themselves surviving. The little food and provisions provided to the Jew’s changed their minds so much they only wanted food and water. Nothing else mattered besides themselves, and even Elie saw a drastic change for going to great lengths for his father to only when will the next bowl of soup come. His emotions were broken from care and concern to survival and self-preserve. You need to have seriously drastic events to change you that much, but judging by the book's content it’s not surprising such a huge change happened to the main characters

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