Night Essay, Research Paper
?Where is God now? (A man behind me asked)?He is hanging here on this
gallows?? This is where the Holocaust left young Elie. It left him with a
feeling that there is no God, or if there is, he is not as wonderful as everyone
has been proclaiming that he is. The story begins in the small town of Sighet
near Transylvania were Elie lived with his parents and two little sisters. Elie
studied the Talmud during the day and spent his evenings in Synagogue praying.
His life revolved around his undying faith and love for God. He loved God and
the Jewish faith so much that he often cried while he was praying. He and his
family lived without fear and in happiness until some of the people of Sighet
were deported. One of them, Moche the Beadle, returned with stories of Jews
being slaughtered and babies being tortured and used as firing practice. The
stories were dismissed as crazy and they told themselves that they were all
safe. They believed they were in the peaceful hands of God. Unfortunately, in
1944 German troops moved into their town. They set up ghettos and controlled
their lives with fear. The people of Sighet were forced to leave their homes.
They were packed into cattle wagon trains and given buckets of water and bread
to eat. They stayed in the train for many days and were not allowed to get out
to go to the bathroom so they were condemned to live amidst filth. Some people
started going crazy. One old woman screamed almost the entire time about flames
and burning flesh. Little did everyone know that what she was yelling about was
the fate of everyone in her company. When they finally arrived in Birkenau, they
exited the train to the smell of burning flesh and the sight of smoke and
flames. When they got into the camp Elie and his father were separated from his
mother and two little sisters. They did not realize immediately that they would
never see them again. After they were separated they were told to march in a
line that was heading directly toward a tremendous hole in the ground in which
the charred remains of Jewish corpses could be seen. It is then that Elie begins
to wonder why it is that he has been blessing God. The people around him had
begun to say a prayer for the dead and for themselves. He wonders why he should
bother? No God that he knows would let such evil go on, therefore there must be
no God. People around him were asking the same questions. Others told them that
God was testing their faith and if they kept themselves strong and survived for
as long as they could, God would be pleased and they would be blessed. They
continued marching straight up to the edge of the ditch with faith in their
hearts and were suddenly told to turn left into barracks. Elie and his father
were given tips by men that had been in the camp longer about how the Germans
were working and how to survive. They were told what you had to say and how you
had to act in order to stay alive longer. All Elie cared about was not being
separated from his father. For over a year they were forced to live and work in
extreme conditions. They were made to walk miles on little sleep and even less
food for continuous hours and days at a time. Men were beaten and killed for
their hunger, fear, sickness and exhaustion. They had to endure the stress of
selection where they were briefly examined and were selected to be killed
because their weakness was a drain on the camp. Elie?s father grew very sick
and became very weak. One day while he was calling for Elie to help and comfort
him guards at their camp beat him. When Elie woke up the next morning his father
was gone from his bed, inevitably taken to a crematory. A few weeks after he and
many other Jews were set free. ~* Review *~ Night is an amazingly thought
provoking and touching story. The descriptions of the horrors that Elie faced
grab you and make you understand completely what kind of pain he and everyone
else faced. This book was written to show how exactly horrendous the Holocaust
was. It also shows you how evil can destroy persons belief in something that
they hold dear, no matter how precious the belief is to them. I think the book
clarifies how much hatred there is in the world. I think that people look simply
at what is right in front of their face and take it for its value, forgetting
that somewhere else, the hatred is intolerable. I don?t think that until many
years after the Holocaust, did people start to realize what had happened. I
don?t understand how powerful nations with common sense in their brains could
have let such attrocities take place, especially when one single, solitary man
is the cause of all of it. We have all herd stories of the terrible acts that
were committed during the Holocaust but I think it is hard to imagine how
horrible it really was until you read a novel such as this one. I wold have
never thought that people would fight for their lives and their beliefs in such
a way. To let themselves go through so much for so long because of their
unlimited faith in God is unfathomable. To hear of their hardships and their
undying strength gives me a feeling of hope and pride. People should not let
their lives be judged by ignorant people. They should fight for as long and hard
as they can for what they think is right. An example of this need to live, to
keep going as if to see how much one can endure is in chapter six. Here Elie
describes the forty-two mile march from Buna to Gleiwitz in the blinding snow.
There were thousands of men running as fast as they could, with scarcely any
meat left on their bodies or clothes on their backs. If they fell out of ranks
or slowed the pace they were shot dead on the spot. ?They had orders to fire
on any who could not keep up. Their fingers on the triggers, they did not
depriver themselves of this pleasure.? I think that this work is very
important to the study of culture and society. You begin to understand that the
holocaust was an extreme example of the damage that ignorance can lead to. I
think that Mr. Wiesel has thoroughly covered and expressed how necessary it is
to know about the horrors of the holocaust. He carefully writes the novel with
the greatest of detail to stress exactly how terrible their situation was. With
his descriptions you are able to picture everything vividly and nearly smell the
burning flesh right along with him. Everyday we hear of hate crimes against
people of color or varying sexuality. All of this hate is formed in ignorance.
Fortunately, I don?t believe that in these modern times, any of us will ever
see anything as horrible as the holocaust, which is why I think it is important
for everyone to read this novel. It helps keep the words and memory of the
victims alive in our minds and it may reach someone who has hate in their heart,
it may make them realize the extent of pain that hate can cause.