Human Rights In Elie Wiesel's Night

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There have been many books written about the Holocaust but one of the best ones is Night. Night is a book written by Elie Wiesel describing about his life in multiple concentration camps during the Holocaust. In the book there are lots of examples of Jewish people’s human rights being violated. What mainly happens to people when they have their human rights taken away is them either being killed or tortured without any reason. In the book, Night, article three from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is violated countless of times. Article three states that, “Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.” One example of this article being taken away is when Wiesel and his father get separated from his mother …show more content…

Wiesel had been wrong to go where Idek had told everyone not to go but he shouldn't have been whipped so much. Another sadistic example of this article being taken away is when Idek beats his father, Shlomo Wiesel, because he wasn’t marching with the rest of the group: “And he began beating him with an iron bar” (54). This is another instance where not only was it enough that he was in a concentration camp and barely surviving, but Idek still tortured him multiple times for not marching with the group. A final instance of article five being taken away is when his father was sick and kept asking Wiesel for water, but exasperates the guard to much to the point where he hits him. Wiesel recalls,“ He continued to call me. The officer wielded his club and dealt him a violent blow to the head” (111). This guard had seen that Shlomo was on the verge of dying and couldn't let him be but he had to quiet him up by hitting him on his

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