Night Elie Wiesel Faith

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Religious faith can be the greatest grounding factor in traumatic events. In Night by Elie Wiesel, the reader is a viewer of the abuse of the Holocaust and how that causes Mr. Wiesel to lose his childhood, become depressed, and lose his sense of self. This analysis will reveal exactly why that cause and effect is. First, Elie begins to lose his inner child and mature into a man as he loses his spirituality. Elie has just arrived in Birkenau. He is sent down the right side of two lines by the ill-fated Dr. Mengele along with his father. While waiting in that line, he watches as children are thrown into fire and many others in his line start reciting Kaddish for themselves in fear of also being thrown into the crematorium. “Yisgadal, veyiskadash, …show more content…

On that first horrid night in Birkenau, Elie begins to feel his faith and will to live shattering looking at the flames that encased the camp. “Never shall I forget those flames that consumed my faith forever. Never shall I forget the nocturnal silence that deprived me for all eternity of the desire to live. Never shall I forget those moments that murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams into ashes.” (34). Such a sight, like the smoke that emits from the bodies of thousands of innocent Jewish people, has left Elie has taken his will to live and his faith in God. He doesn’t necessarily not believe in God in the sense that he doesn’t think He exists anymore, but in the way that he doesn’t believe in His ability to watch over humanity if he would allow such crimes to be committed. The overwhelming feeling of reality, the reality that his God has either abandoned them or sits and watches as sinless people are slaughtered, the reality that he could be thrown into those flames at any point, has crashed over his head leaving him so severely melancholic that he see’s no point in going onward. He feels as though he’s been discarded or unfairly punished by a God, he has worshiped his whole life. As his faith in one of the most grounding figures in his life depletes, he spins further into despair and suicidal ideation. Becoming further …show more content…

After stumbling upon a Kapo having sexual relations with a young Polish woman in the work depot, Elie receives public lashings for invading the Kapo’s privacy. “A-7713!” I stepped forward. “A crate!” he ordered. They brought a crate to the house. “Lie down on it” – a sigh. On your belly!” I obeyed. I no longer felt anything except the lashes of the whip.” (57). Elie puts up no protest, he recognizes himself as “A-7713”, he lies down on the crate without objection. First, he has been dulled down enough to the point that he is no longer phased by the stripping of his birth name, his real name, Elie. Secondly, he knows he cannot do anything to escape his punishment, but no longer holds the self-respect to fight for himself in the spirit of human resistance. After seeing his God sit silently while minorities are exterminated by the Nazis, he no longer feels that there is an ultimate justice that will provide him with safety and distribute karma to his unjust punishers. Now, believing that there isn’t a loving father watching over him, someone to keep him safe has caused him to lose all hope of justice or freedom, so he just does as he’s told in hopes of diminishing the punishments he’s dealt. At the end of his journey, Elie is now by himself in a hospital and finally has time to realize who he’s become. “One day when I was able to get up, I

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