Human Rights In Ellie Wiesel's Night

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It is not possible for human rights to be actualized for every person. Ellie’s family were a poor family was moved into a Ghetto. Ellie talks about when he was in a Nazi concentration camp and death of his family members. In the passage of Night, he tries to talk about his religion and to let people forget the Jewish religion. Ellie made this book let people know that nobody should ever feel how Ellie feels. One reason why it is not possible for human right for everybody because in the passage, nobody didn’t have right own property. Night states, “Hungarian police burst into every Jewish home in town: Jew was hence forth for bidden to own gold”. In this passage it states, Ellie’s family and other got their own stuff and which they had property of. According to Night, “The Hungarian police used their rifle butts, their clubs to indiscriminately, strike old men and women, children and cripple”. In other words, The Hungarian polices yelled the neighborhood to get …show more content…

In Night view, “Here there, the police were lashing out with their clubs: ‘Faster!’ I had no strength left”. To put it another way, the police wasn’t treating the Jews equal and Ellie’s sister was getting beaten. Night states, “Then came march past the victims. The two men were no longer alive”. This reveals that in the camps people were forced to watch people die and they would kill any Jew for no reason. Some people might say that Jew got equal rights. Night states, “We had received our black coffee, our ration of bread”. (Wiesel 73) In other words, this shows that Ellie got food almost every day at work. The evidence, however, overwhelmingly supports the argument that not many Jew never got any resources. Night states, “I was terrible hungry, yet I refused to touch it”. (Wiesel 42) To put it another way, Ellie’s family never have a lot of food so they had to share ration of their

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