Auschwitz, Birkenau and Bechenwald are just a few names that awaken the nightmares of the Holocaust. The suffering and gruesome deaths that took place at these and other concentration camps were greater than any experienced. The Holocaust produced a void in the souls of those who survived, and Elie Wiesel was one of those people. Wiesel was one of the minority of Jews to survive the Holocaust. His family did not make it through with him, and this had lasting effects. Before the Holocaust Wiesel was one of the most devoted Jewish child. Up until the end he waited for God to intervene. When that did not follow through, he felt betrayal and began to doubt God in his mercy. In Night by Elie Wiesel, the author utilizes the motif of faith and harsh tones in order to show that human survival comes first in times of hardships. Being forced to forget your own faith in order to survive is one of the spiritual hardships Wiesel goes through being in the concentration camps. During …show more content…
The excruceating suffering that people endured had burst into the consciousness of his supposedly invincible Jewish faith. In the face of the crematory pit, Wiesel says, “For the first time I felt revolt rise up in me. Why should I bless His name? The Eternal, Lord of the Universe, the All-Powerful and Terrible, was silent. What had I to thank Him for?'' (Wiesel, 33) The author utilizes the motif of faith in order to portray the doubt he now has in God. Calling God by the names of the “Eternal, Lord of the Universe, the All- Powerful and Terrible” (33) reflected how much Elie praised God before all the suffering he endured. His constant questioning for finding a reason to belive in God reveals that he is indenial of trustind God after witnessing innocent lives being taken. Lack of faith quickly promoted human survival because he no longer believed in the rumors of peace and
Cruelty. Faith. Survival. In the memoir, Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie, his family, and other Jews are tricked into concentration camps and made prisoners. Here they are treated cruelly, and struggle to survive. This marks the beginning of the Holocaust for Elie but the end for a endless amount of others. When life was normal, Eli had a strong belief in god but as the conditions become less bearable he starts to question his faith and ultimately loses it.
When Elie Wiesel was a kid, he had extreme faith in his religion. Moshe the Beadle is the first person to question Wiesel’s faith. Moshe the Beadle asks Elie Wiesel why he prays; after pondering the thought, Wiesel replies, “I don’t know why” (p. 2). Elie Wiesel does not know the reason why he prays to God when he doesn’t receive anything back. His faith now seems weaker, despite the hours he devotes to God. God gives him Moshe the Beadle when he wants to study the cabala, and his father won’t help him, but once Wiesel arrives at the concentration camp, God shows no such help as he did at that time. Although God may have left Wiesel, his father stepped up to take care of him and show him that all
The main factor of the loss of faith in the Jewish people was the suffering and death they saw all around them, and their incredulity that God had allowed that to happen. Elie says, on page 66: “What does Your grandeur mean, Master of
Everyone experiences emotional and physiological obstacles in their life. However, these obstacles are incomparable to the magnitude of the obstacles the prisoners of the Holocaust faced every day. In his memoir, Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, illustrates the horrors of the concentration camps and their mental tool. Over the course of Night, Wiesel demonstrates, that exposure to an uncaring, hostile world leads to destruction of faith and identity.
As Elie gets used to his new life in such a hellish state, he realizes that the trusting and faithful child that he once had been had been taken away along with his family and all else that he had ever known. While so many others around him still implore the God of their past to bring them through their suffering, Wiesel reveals to the reader that although he still believes that there is a God, he no longer sees Him as a just and compassionate leader but a cruel and testing spectator.
Society has long debated the direction of the effect religion has on people, and in Elie Wiesel’s Night, a book where Eliezer is torn from his home into a ghetto then liquidated into multiple concentration camps, all, while his father, himself and the other jews are tortured, beaten, and worked to death by Nazis and their partners, Elie Wiesel uses Eliezer’s faith to show the resilient nature of religion through anything, even hardship. Elie Wiesel shows that maintaining religion is so important, it is impossible to permanently undo.
During World War II, Hitler's final solution was to annihilate all the Jews. He sent all the Jews to multiple concentration camps, breaking their families up and forcing them to do brutal things. In the book Night, Elie Wiesel tells us about how his experiences in the camps were. He and his father gets split away from his mother and other siblings, so he has to look out for his father like his father has to look out for Elie. Throughout the book, Elie gives examples of how he loses his faith in God.
In Night, Eliezer’s faith, and the struggles he faces with it during the Holocaust is one of the main conflicts in the book. In the beginning of the book, Night, the main character, Eliezer, has very strong faith in God. In the first chapter of the book, on page four, he is asked by Moishe the Beadle why he prays to God, in which he responds, “Why did I pray? Strange question. Why did I live?
Losing faith is when people doesn’t believe in something or someone anymore and that can be really tough in life experience. Some people can face things that seems vicious or truly terrible that is going on in someone life. In the book Night, Wiesel’s faith is part of his studies in Jewish trying to know God which taught him that God is everywhere in the world no matter what and nothing exists without God. During his first night in the concentration camp and during the hanging of the young pipel, Wiesel really struggled to maintain his faith. In Night, Wiesel believes that he struggled to maintain faith in the absence of God, the loss of his family, and the things he witnessed in the concentration camp.
During the holocaust many believed that banishment from their homes was trial sent from God to be endured—a test of faith. In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, his mother and sisters are taken from him and Elie and his father are forced to work in the Nazi concentration camps. But Elie's belief in God begins to falter at the concentration camps of Birkenau-Auschwitz. Here the furnaces are busy night and day burning people and German soldiers throw babies and children into flames. The longer he stays in the concentration camps, the more he sees and experiences cruelty and suffering.
In the novel Night, Elie Wiesel talks of what he had experienced within the concentration camps in WWII. Wiesel consistently portrayed faith throughout the novel showing hope and people stray away from their faith and what they have thought and believed. Elie is a 12 year old boy who is taken to Auschwitz, a concentration camp in Poland where most Jewish prisoners knew if they were sent there it was a sentence to death. Elie has a lot of faith which he slowly starts to question as he endures the hardships within the camp.
During World War II, the concentration camp prisoners were mentally and physically tortured causing them to lose faith in God. They believed that God would help them get through these tough times and help protect the inmates, but they soon came to the realization that he wasn't going to help and wasn't answering their endless amount of prayers. The Jews had to defend themselves and learn how to survive under these harsh conditions, especially since no one should ever have to face them. With this in mind, Elie Wiesel along with many others lost their faith. Although they should never be put into a situation terrible enough to forget the faith they once had, it was stripped from them in those concentration camps. “Never shall I forget those flames that consumed my faith forever” (Wiesel, 34). The flames from the crematoriums consumed his faith forever because he witnessed so many deaths were God should have saved them. At that moment in time, he realized that God wasn't there with them and already clearly stated that Elie and other innocent Jews had to fight and defend themselves. On the contrary, some might say their faith and human spirit drove them to survive. In “Man’s Search for Meaning” by Viktor E. Frankl,
During the atrocity of the Holocaust, prisoners in concentration camps endured many horrific encumbrances; placed on their shoulders with jubilation by the Nazis. However, it was lack of faith that killed many, rather than the actual death they met. They disregarded the wise words of Oliver Wendell Holmes by not having faith to pursue the unknown end. In the novel Night by Elie Wiesel, the majority of the Jewish prisoners mentioned underwent horrible sufferings in the infamous concentration camps of the Third Reich. As a result, a plethora of them struggled to maintain faith in God, hope, and humanity.
In the text, Night, by Elie Wiesel, the dynacism of the narrator is accentuated by the battles he undergoes with his faith throughout. Wiesel's whole journey throughout Auschwitz is greatly influenced with his ongoing argument with his inner self. God, to people of religion, shapes how people live their lives ever since they were young; how they grow, learn, play, economics and who they should fall in love with. God is what maps out their lives, and for the Jews during the Holocaust, this was a backbone for life. In the text, when the Jews get brutally targeted in the Holocaust, Wiesel feels betrayed by God. Through it all, Wiesel goes on a self journey trying to stay alive and trying to stay loyal to his faith.
“Doubt is a pain too lonely to know that faith is his twin brother.”-Khalil Gibran