Essay On Night By Elie Wiesel

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In the first part of the book, Elie describes the journey from his hometown of Sighet, Transylvania to the concentration camp in Auschwitz. Something that really shocked me was how optimistic the Jews seemed to be when the Nazis seized control of Elie’s town. Even when the Gestapo took all of the Jews valuables and made them wear the Star of David, many of the Jews walked carefree and happily through the streets as if it were a normal day. No news got to the people of Sighet about what happened when the Gestapo took control of a Jewish town so, the Jews had no idea that they were going to be put in labor camps and most people would be killed. Another part of the book that disturbed me was the conditions the prisoners were forced to live in …show more content…

Next, when the Jews are transported to Auschwitz, there were so many people on to a single train car that nobody could even sit down because they were packed tighter than sardines. This shows that the Nazis had no sympathy or respect for the detainees. Even though I always knew that the Jews were treated terribly, Wiesel uses amazing details to really convey the atrocious conditions the Jews had to endure, “The Hungarian police made us climb into the cars, eighty persons in each one. They handed us some bread, a few pails of water. They checked the bars on the windows to make sure they would not come loose. One person was placed in charge of every car: if someone managed to escape that person would be shot”( Wiesel 22). It really shocked me how the Gestapo treated them like animals instead of human beings. Another way the Gestapo treated the Jews unfairly was the way they split up families without batting an eye. When people got to the camps they were forced to separate by gender which, caused mass panic for the Jews because they didn’t want to leave their

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