Night Elie Wiesel

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Landry Mueller Mrs. Malmquist English 1B 10 May 2024 Human vs Nonhuman The question of what it means to be human explores the essence of humanity in the face of suffering and adversity. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, he reflects on his experience of the Holocaust as a teenage jew. Around 6 million Jewish people were murdered during the Holocaust. Elie talks about his experiences as a teenage boy in Nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust. He deals with the complexities of human nature, inhumane treatment, and survival in the most challenging times. Being human means living, having emotions, and knowing what is inhumane. It is not possible to stop being human. During the Holocaust in the concentration camp, Elie had to deal with brutal treatment, …show more content…

Elie has some internal struggles with faith, morality, and survival. While Elie and other prisoners were on the train cars on the way to concentration camps, people were throwing bread into the train cars and watching as the Jews fought for the bread in a life-or-death situation. The Jews were not being treated with respect, and the Germans were laughing like it was a game. As we know through the book, Elie kept trying to turn to God and asked himself how God could let this happen to him. He wondered when he would be free and live like an average child again. “For the first time, I felt revolt rise in me. Why should I bless his name? The Eternal, Lord of the Universe, the All-Powerful and Terrible, is silent. What had I to thank him for” (Wiesel 44). This quote shows how he turns to God and wonders why he should believe God will help him. Later in the book, we learn that Elie has taken his dad’s ration. Some people may say that Elie was inhuman, but he was not. Elie and the readers know that his father is not going to live for that much longer, and Elie is trying to fight for his life. Elie knows that his dad is not going to live that much

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