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Title: Night by Elie Wiesel


1
Nightby Elie Wiesel
  • Presented by Sasha Lidman

2
Contents
  • Elie Wiesel- a biography3
  • Chapter 1 summary11
  • Chapter 2 summary12
  • Chapter 3 summary13
  • Chapter 4 summary14
  • Chapter 5 summary16
  • Chapter 6 summary18
  • Chapter 7 summary20
  • My reflection of the book.22
  • Bibliography24

3
Elie Wiesel- a biography
  • Elie Wiesel was born in the small town of Sighet
    in Transylvania, where people of different
    languages and religions have lived side by side
    for centuries, sometimes peacefully, sometimes in
    bitter conflict. The region has long been claimed
    by both Hungary and Romania and, in the 20th
    century, has changed hands repeatedly, a hostage
    to the fortunes of war.

4
  • Elie Wiesel grew up in the close-knit Jewish
    community of Sighet. While the family spoke
    Yiddish at home, they read newspapers and
    conducted their grocery business in German,
    Hungarian or Romanian as the occasion demanded.
    Ukrainian, Russian and other languages were also
    widely spoken in the town. Elie began religious
    studies in classical Hebrew almost as soon as he
    could speak. The young boy's life centered
    entirely on his religious studies. He loved the
    mystical tradition and folk tales of the Hassidic
    sect of Judaism, to which his mother's family
    belonged. His father, though religious,
    encouraged the boy to study the modern Hebrew
    language and concentrate on his secular studies.
    The first years of World War II left Sighet
    relatively untouched. Although the village
    changed hands from Romania to Hungary, the Wiesel
    family believed they were safe from the
    persecutions suffered by Jews in Germany and
    Poland.

5
  • The secure world of Wiesel's childhood ended
    abruptly with the arrival of the Nazis in Sighet
    in 1944. The Jewish inhabitants of the village
    were deported en masse to concentration camps in
    Poland. The 15 year-old boy was separated from
    his mother and sister immediately on arrival in
    Auschwitz. He never saw them again. He managed to
    remain with his father for the next year as they
    were worked almost to death, starved, beaten, and
    shuttled from camp to camp on foot, or in open
    cattle cars, in driving snow, without food,
    proper shoes, or clothing. In the last months of
    the war, Wiesel's father succumbed to dysentery,
    starvation, exhaustion and exposure.

6
  • After the war, the teenaged Wiesel found asylum
    in France, where he learned for the first time
    that his two older sisters had survived the war.
    Wiesel mastered the French language and studied
    philosophy at the Sorbonne, while supporting
    himself as a choir master and teacher of Hebrew.
    He became a professional journalist, writing for
    newspapers in both France and Israel.

7
  • For ten years, he observed a self-imposed vow of
    silence and wrote nothing about his wartime
    experience. In 1955, at the urging of the
    Catholic writer Francois Mauriac, he set down his
    memories in Yiddish, in a 900-page work entitled
    Un die welt hot geshvign (And the world kept
    silent). The book was first published in Buenos
    Aires, Argentina. Wiesel compressed the work into
    a 127-page French adaptation, La Nuit (Night),
    but several years passed before he was able to
    find a publisher for the French or English
    versions of the work. Even after Wiesel found
    publishers for the French and English
    translations, the book sold few copies.

8
  • In 1956, while he was in New York covering the
    United Nations, Elie Wiesel was struck by a taxi
    cab. His injuries confined him to a wheelchair
    for almost a year. Unable to renew the French
    document which had allowed him to travel as a
    "stateless" person, Wiesel applied successfully
    for American citizenship. Once he recovered, he
    remained in New York and became a feature writer
    for the Yiddish-language newspaper, the Jewish
    Daily Forward (Der forverts ).

9
  • Wiesel continued to write books in French,
    including the semi-autobiographical novels L'Aube
    (Dawn), and Le Jour (translated as The Accident
    ). In his novel La Ville de la Chance (translated
    as The Town Beyond the Wall ), Wiesel imagined a
    return to his home town, a journey he did not
    undertake in life until after the book was
    published.
  • As these and other books began to win him an
    international reputation, Wiesel took an
    increasing interest in the plight of persecuted
    Jews in the Soviet Union. He first traveled to
    the USSR in 1965 and reported on his travels in
    The Jews of Silence. His 1968 account of the Six
    Day War between Israel and its Arab neighbors
    appeared in English as A Beggar In Jerusalem . In
    time, Wiesel was able to use his fame to plead
    for justice for oppressed peoples in the Soviet
    Union, South Africa, Vietnam, Biafra and
    Bangladesh

10
  • He has written plays including Zalmen, or the
    Madness of God and The Trial of God (Le Proces de
    Shamgorod ). His other novels include The Gates
    of the Forest, The Oath, The Testament, and The
    Fifth Son. His essays and short stories are
    collected in the volumes Legends of Our Time, One
    Generation After, and A Jew Today. Although
    Wiesel still writes his books in French, his wife
    Marion now collaborates with him on their English
    translation.
  • In 1978, President Jimmy Carter appointed Elie
    Wiesel Chairman of the United States Holocaust
    Memorial Council. In 1985 he was awarded the
    Congressional Medal of Freedom and, in 1986, the
    Nobel Prize for Peace. The English translation of
    his memoirs appeared in 1995 as All Rivers Run to
    the Sea. Since 1976, he has been Andrew Mellon
    Professor of Humanities at Boston University. He
    makes his home in New York City with his wife and
    their son, Elisha.

11
Chapter 1(pages 1-20)
  • This part of the book begins with the description
    of a man called Moche the Beadle. This man was a
    mentor to Elie, teaching him the Cabbala against
    his fathers will. One day, Moche was deported ,
    along with the other Sighet Jews. They were all
    soon forgotten, until Moche returned and told the
    townspeople what happened to the others- how they
    were forced to dig their own graves and then
    mercilessly killed. Even though Moche only came
    back to warn the Jews, they did not believe him ,
    thinking he was trying to get money or sympathy.
    The Jews remained optimistic even when the German
    soldiers entered their territory and the first
    decrees against the Jews were formed. When the
    Germans set up the Ghettos in Sighet, the Jews
    became optimistic,hoping they would remain in the
    Ghetto until the end of the war. Soon, however ,
    they received news of a deportation soon to come.
    Elies family had a week to prepare for the
    departure, and they prepared for a long journey
    not knowing where they would be taken. When it
    was finally time to leave, the Jews were
    literally stuffed into small cattle wagons.

12
Chapter 2 (pages 21-26)
  • In this part the Jews are taken somewhere in a
    cattle wagon. The conditions are awful, there is
    no food and the heat is unbearable.Here began the
    slow transformation of the Jews from human
    beings into animal-like creatures- Elie complains
    that the youngsters had sex openly in the train,
    inconsiderate of the others. Also, when an old
    woman named Madame Schachter went out of her mind
    and started screaming of a fire and a furnace she
    sees, the men beat her up repeatedly to shut her
    up. Later they even tied her up and gagged her,
    even though she was obviously unwell after the
    loss of most of her family. In the end of the
    chapter the Jews actually saw the flames she saw
    earlier. The Jews had arrived in Birkenau- the
    reception center for Auschwitz.

13
Chapter 3 (pages 26-44)
  • This section of the book was quite disturbing.
    The first shock was when Elie was separated from
    his mother and sisters. Then, the most horrible
    of all- he saw the burning pit of babies and
    young children. Thinking he was to be burned Elie
    thought of suicide on the electric wire to save
    himself the agony of burning.Its then when the
    first question in god rose in him. Interesting
    though, that while questioning Gods mercy and
    refusing to bless him, he had never questioned
    his existence.
  • Here, the Nazis begin the work of robbing the
    Jews of their individuality and humiliating them-
    all have their hair cut and are given ill-fitting
    prisoners clothes. The guards threated them as
    animals. The men that were singled out for being
    stronger were made into the Sonder-Kommandos.
    ,made to burn their fellow prisoners, their own
    brothers! To me this is the most horrible
    torture imaginable.
  • At the camp the next day, the sign on it said,
    Work is liberty. Liberty? In Auschwitz?
    Yet, it was, in a way, logical., as long as you
    could work, you were free from death. The head of
    Elies block met the prisoners with kind, human
    words and they regained hope. It was at this camp
    that the man Stein approached Elie and his
    father. He was a distant relative that Elies
    father did not remember, but Elie had recognized
    him. Stein wanted to know if they had heard
    anything about his family, so Elie lied and told
    him that he had heard that they were alive and
    well. Elie was wise enough to realize that this
    white lie would bring Keep Stein alive. Later
    Stein received some real news of his family. Elie
    had never seen him again.
  • In the end of the chapter the remaining Jews
    marched to buna,

14
Chapter 4 (pages 45-62)
  • In this chapter Elie and the other Jews adapted
    in Buna. They were threated by the Kapos as
    cattle or merchandise. Elie got in a pretty good
    unit, with friendly comrades, a sympathetic
    foreman who even placed him with his father and
    an easy warehouse job. Sometimes the Kapo would
    have a rage outburst and beat whoever got in his
    way. Once, Elie did, and Idek beat him
    severely.Then,a young girl that worked there as
    French, helped him and even comforted him in
    German- even though she was risking herself by
    that . Another time, the victim was Elies
    father- and Elie wasnt mad at the Kapo but at
    his father- for not knowing how to escape the
    outburst! This is what camp life has made of him.
  • Later on, the foreman had noticed Elies gold
    tooth. The sympathetic, intelligent youth was no
    more- the greed had turned him heartless and he
    tormented Elies father. Eventually, Elie had to
    give in.

15
  • One Sunday, the camp was bombed by American
    planes. This gave the Jews a new hope, even
    though each bomb could kill hundreds of them! But
    they didnt fear death anymore.
  • During the alert, one of the prisoners stole some
    soup.
  • A week later, he was executed for the crime.
  • He died with a curse upon Germany on his lips
    and all the prisoners were made to look at him.
  • This wasnt the last execution Elie had to
    witness. He tells of one that had shaken him more
    than the others the execution of a young child
    who was loved by all in the camp.The child worked
    under an oberkapo found guilty in sabotage. He
    was put to torture beforehand but would not
    speak.
  • When the child was hung Elie felt as if god had
    died.

16
Chapter 5 (pages 63-80)
  • The summer was coming to an end, and the Jews
    celebrated Rosh Hashanah. Elies mind revolted
    against the prairs- He had been through so much
    until now that his faith was gone. He stirred
    against praising the god that let all this hell
    happen to those who pray before him and accused
    god for leaving them. In Yom Kippur Elie did not
    fast, as if protesting against God.
  • After Yom Kippur came two selections. Elie ,
    among with his father and everyone else,
    panicked. His father even left him an inheritage-
    a knife and a spoon, preparing to die.
  • Luckily, the father managed to escape the
    selection. But Akiba Drummer didnt. In all the
    previous chapters he was the one never losing
    hope But lately he had lost his faith in God.
    Elie explained his death by this.

17
  • When the winter came, the conditions in the camp
    went even worse, and in January Elie got a
    frostbite on his right foot. He had it examined
    and the doctor insisted on an operation. In the
    hospital Elie saw near-human conditions again- he
    had forgotten them by then! His neighbor advised
    him to get out of the hospital as soon as
    possible, but Elie didnt know whether even to
    trust him or not
  • Two days after Elie had an operation a rumor of
    the Red Army approaching was spread. Soon the
    Jews were told to prepare for evacuation. Elie
    decided to go with the rest of the Jews,even
    though his foot was bleeding and he couldnt
    walk.. Ironically, the red army did come, and
    the invalids left in camp were released 2 days
    after the evacuation.

18
Chapter 6 (pages 81-92)
  • The Jews marched, followed by the SS who soon
    made them
  • run and shot anyone who couldnt keep up. Elie
    was
  • completely exausted, hardly dragging himself. The
    race was
  • so hard the idea of a quick death started to
    fascinate him,
  • and the only thing that stopped him from giving
    up was his
  • fathers presence- Elie had to continue suporting
    him.
  • When the Jews were given the order to rest,
    Elies father
  • didnt let him sleep- those who did, froze to
    death. They
  • went into a shed and slept in there, taking turns
    to watch
  • one another.
  • One of the most unsettling parts of the book to
    me is the
  • story of rabbi Eliahou and his son, who left him
    behind. The
  • most horrible part of the nazi abuse was the
    psychological
  • effect. The Jews turned into mere animals. In the
    race for
  • survival bonds suck as the one a father and a son
    share,
  • were erased.
  • Elie prayed to god for the strength never to do
    such a deed.

19
  • Finally, the Jews reached Gleiwitz. There, Elie
    met an old friend Juliek, the violinist. He had
    brought his violin with him.Falling asleep among
    the corpses
  • Elie heard him play. Juliek played as he would
    never play again putting his soul into the
    strings. When Elie woke up Juliek was already
    dead, his violin trampled.Elie was kept in the
    camp for 3 days without food or drink. Then there
    was a selection.
  • Elies father was chosen to die but Elie ran
    after him and causing a confusion, brought him
    back. Later, the Jews were given bread. For
    water, each ate a
  • mouthful of snow from his neighbors back. The SS
    offecers laughed at this.
  • Then, the train arrived. The wagons had no roofs
    and
  • it was still snowing. The Jews were loaded in and
    the
  • conoy set out.

20
Chapter 7 (pages 93-108)
  • When he was on the train, Elie recalls a stop
    where a workman threw some pieces of bread on to
    the train. The prisoners began to tear each other
    apart for a piecehe saw a man assault his own
    father for some bread. However, that man was
    killed right after by another man anyway... The
    Jews were no longer humans, they ceased to be men
    long ago. Unable to prove their humanity they
    acted as mere animals. Elie tells of an event
    that happened years later where a woman was
    throwing some money to some poor native children
    in Aden that reminded him of his situation. The
    children were fighting mercilessly over the
    coins, and when Elie asked her to stop, she
    replied, I like to give charity..... Obviously,
    it was only done for the entertainment, and so it
    is in the story. The workmen too didnt think of
    the Jews as of human beings.
  • In Buchenwald, Elies father had fallen ill , and
    the doctors didnt help.His neighbors abused him
    and took away his food. He kept begging for water
    and eventually passed away. Elie had no tears to
    weep for him, and to his dismay, he even felt a
    bit liberated from the heavy burden

21
  • on April fifth, the SS said that they were going
    to start
  • evacuating Buchenwald one day at a time, and stop
    the
  • rations of bread and soup.The evacuation began.
  • Finally, on April tenth, there was an alarm, and
    a revolt the
  • next day. The prisoners were rescued by the
    Americans that
  • Evening. Their first act as free men was to eat.
    That was the
  • only desire still alive in them .None thought of
    their
  • families or of revenge. The author ends the book
    with the
  • Following lines
  • From the depth of the mirror a corpse gazed back
    at me.
  • The look in his eyes as they stared into mine,
    has never left me.

22
My Reflection of the book
  • My experience of reading this book has two
    aspects. On one hand, it was an amazing book. The
    author has a very special writing style that
    helped me imagine all the events vividly. On the
    other hand thats what made it unbelievably
    painful to read. The more I read, the more I
    realized- If I would be there I would never reach
    the end of the war.
  • The Holocaust is pretty much my familys history,
    al my parents survived the war. My mind cannot
    comprehend all this. It is very stirring that all
    that happened to the Jews only because of their
    religion! I cant help agreeing with Elie Wiesel
    Where was the Justice?!
  • I cant say Ive learned anything new about the
    Holocaust from the book, since Ive been reading
    about it a lot earlier. Still, the book was so
    vivid it made me almost experience the Holocaust,
    and of course, understand it better.

23
  • Im very gald I got to share opinions with a
    foreign student, since it was very interesting
    for me to see how an outsiders point of view on
    those events. As I see, they stirred my partner
    just the same.
  • I believe my English has improved from reading
    the book- I enriched my vocabulary a lot and
    learned new expressions.
  • In the end I feel that I learned something from
    this project and Im glad we went through with
    it.

24
Bibliography
  • http//www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/wie0bio-1
  • The book Night
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