Humanity and Identity: The Impact of Inhumanity

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The Thin Line Between Humanity and Identity Tracking through the memories, Elie Wiesel insights Oprah into his wisdom. He recalls that, “in those times it was human to be inhumane.” Humanity isn’t a constant, rather it is something that evolves beside your identity. Yet, one’s humanity defines their identity. A brute is identified as one and a sweetheart is identified as caring. Through the sadism afflicted on the Jews by the Germans, the Jewish people began losing their identity, faith, and lastly their lives. In attempts of purifying Germany of the impure Jew bloodline, The German political party, Nazism, stripped Jews of their: citizenship, home, family, name, and finally their life. The stripping of identities and personalities had devastating effects and often turned innocent children into brutes. Elie Wiesel, however struggling with the fate, failed in …show more content…

Elie Wiesel was once very spiritually grounded, however as he lost his faith he began to become less humane. In Elie’s strive to be more in tune with God, he tries to read the Kabbalah, a sacred Jewish passage, prematurely. Elie even compares praying to breathing when he says, “Why did I pray? Strange question...Why did I breathe?” (Wiesel 4). Elie’s faith is so strong he could not imagine a world where he did not pray, much like he could not imagine not breathing. However, he knows the exact moment he lost his faith. He delves into this moment and remembers it as, “the moment that murdered my God” (Wiesel 34). In his eyes, something that was so close to him, like his faith, is a significant loss and is a significant shift in his identity. He struggles to maintain his faith and begins to question God’s existence, and His audacity for the torment he is subjected throughout the Holocaust. Although Elie Wiesel may seem like a brute in his eyes, in comparison to other victims he is on the fence between human and

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