Sunday, November 24, 2019
Free Essays on Elie Wiesels Night
 themselves,   in spite of the disbelief, degradation and destruction of the concentration   camp universe.       Night opens in 1943, during a time when Hungary's Jews were still largely   untouched by the horrors of the Holocaust. It begins with a description   of Moshe the Beadle, who is instructing the pious young Eliezer in the   mysteries of the cabbala, Jewish mysticism. Eliezer's education is   interruptedwhen Moshe is deported with the other foreign-born Jews of Sighet.   Moshe   returns to Sighet with an almost unbelievable story: all the Jews with   whom he was deported have been massacred. The villagers react with disbelief;   they denounce him as a madman. As Ora Avni writes, this first episode of   Night reminds the reader of the perils of disbelief.       Wiesel, the writer, occupies the same position as Moshe is the story:   he is telling stories that are too horrible to be believed, and yet they   are true. As Lucy Dawidowicz writes, "To comprehend the strange and   unfamiliar,   the human mind proceeds from the reality of experience by applying reason,   logic, and analogy...The Jews, in their earliest encounters with the   anti-Jewish   policies of Hitler's Germany, saw their situation as a retro version of   their history, but in their ultima...  Free Essays on Elie Wiesel's Night  Free Essays on Elie Wiesel's Night    Elie Wiesel's Night was first published in an English translation in 1960;   it is a slightly fictionalized account of Wiesel's experiences as a   concentration   camp survivor. His first attempt to write about his experiences was written   in Yiddish and contained some eight hundred pages; the English translation   of the French version of those experiences, Night, is less than a hundred   and fifty pages. It is episodic in structure, with only a few key scenes   in each chapter serving to illustrate the themes of the work. One of the   most important of these themes is faith, and specifically Eliezer's struggle   to retain his faith in God, in himself, in humanity, and in words themselves,   in spite of the disbelief, degradation and destruction of the concentration   camp universe.       Night opens in 1943, during a time when Hungary's Jews were still largely   untouched by the horrors of the Holocaust. It begins with a description   of Moshe the Beadle, who is instructing the pious young Eliezer in the   mysteries of the cabbala, Jewish mysticism. Eliezer's education is   interruptedwhen Moshe is deported with the other foreign-born Jews of Sighet.   Moshe   returns to Sighet with an almost unbelievable story: all the Jews with   whom he was deported have been massacred. The villagers react with disbelief;   they denounce him as a madman. As Ora Avni writes, this first episode of   Night reminds the reader of the perils of disbelief.       Wiesel, the writer, occupies the same position as Moshe is the story:   he is telling stories that are too horrible to be believed, and yet they   are true. As Lucy Dawidowicz writes, "To comprehend the strange and   unfamiliar,   the human mind proceeds from the reality of experience by applying reason,   logic, and analogy...The Jews, in their earliest encounters with the   anti-Jewish   policies of Hitler's Germany, saw their situation as a retro version of   their history, but in their ultima...    
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