Title of Work: Night Country/Culture: Eastern European Literary Period: 20 th Century Type of literature: Autobiography Author: Elie Wiesel Authorial Information: E ile Wiesel was born in Transalvanya. He was asked many times to write about his experiences in the Holocaust. He waited ten years after he was freed from Buchenwald, he didn’t want to write a hate-filled account of his experience. He received the Noble Prize for Night in 1992. He lives in the United states and teaches at Boston University. Setting: Night takes place in World War II in the 1940’s.
It starts in Sighet, Hungary. When the Nazis arrive in Hungary and the Jews are move into the ghetto. After a short period of time they where moved to Birkenau, an area in Auschwitz. After some time in Auschwitz, Elie and his father were moved to Buna. They were then changed two more times first to Gleiwitz and finally to Buchenwald where he was freed. Theme: One theme was survival.
People risked their lives during an air to get a drop more of soup, sons killed fathers for a ration of bread, ripping clothes off the dead (or believed to be dead) to stay warm! Characters: Elie Wiesel is the author of the book and the story is told from his point of view. He is a Jewish Hungarian who was taken to Birkenau in 1944 at the age of fifteen. Wiesel shares his horrifying experience and gives detailed descriptions of life in concentration camps. To the Nazis Wiesel was a good worker since he was young and strong.
The Term Paper on Life Experiences Are What Makes A Persons Personality
An individuals experiences, past and present provide a significant basis for the type of person they will become. Relationships that are established during childhood and adolescence are important for the shaping of someone's personality, as most personality development occurs in the early stages of life. Experiences that someone must deal with in the present sense also contributes to their ...
Through this horrible experience Wiesel grows up. Chromo Wiesel was Elie’s father. He was a valued member in their Jewish community and many people came to him for advice. He remained strong throughout the entire ordeal even though he was getting old and the small rations were insufficient.
He eventually died, although it’s unknown whether he died in his sleep or if h was taken to the crematory still alive. Juliek is a Polish violinist who is also a prisoner in the concentration camp with Elie and his father. Juliek loves music and dreams of being able to play Beethoven, but Jews aren’t allowed to play German music. When forced to leave Buna since the lines are drawing near, he takes his violin with him and plays for the dying men outside Gleiwitz. When Elie awoke Juliek had passed away, his violin beside him. Moshe the Beadle was a poor, religious man who lived amongst the Jews of Sighet.
Before he was deported he sang and chanted. He was also Elie’s master of the cabbala. When he came back from the or est of Galicia his whole demeanor had changed. He told stories of how the Gestapo had killed all of the deportees by mercilessly shooting each of them and leaving them for dead. No one believed him and thought he had lost his mind even though he tried many times without avail to get them to listen. Quotes: I forgot what quotes I had.
I turned them in on a sheet of paper on the tenth of September, I hope you still have them. Glossary: Hasidic~a section of the Jewish religious Cabbala~a secret science of the Jewish rab is to interpret the hidden meaning of the Pentateuch Talmud~the bilk which contains the whole body of the Jewish civil and canonical laws and traditions, with the commentaries and speculations of the Rabbis, consisting of two parts, the Mishnah and Gemara. Gestapo~German secret police. Lorries~a long four-wheeled wagon without sides: a miner’s handcart Fascist~an advocate of fascism Ghetto~section of a city in which a large number of Jews dwell.