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  1. Night is written in short, simple sentences. Critics call this kind of writing "controlled." That means that every word has been carefully chosen for a precise meaning. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Elie says, "My eyes had opened and I was alone, terribly alone."

  2. The Holocaust shakes his faith in God and the world around him, and he sees the depths of cruelty and selfishness to which any human being—including himself—can sink. Through Eliezer, Wiesel intimately conveys his horrible experiences and his transformation as a prisoner during the Holocaust. Read an analysis of the relationship between ...

  3. January 29. Explain how the father/son roles have been reversed in the case of Elie and his father. Elie is taking control of him and his father telling him what he can and can't do and is taking care of his father as well. Why is Elie's father beaten. Two others in their bunk thought he was weak and a liability.

  4. Moishe the Beadle. Moishe the Beadle is the first character introduced in Night, and his values resonate throughout the text, even though he himself disappears after the first few pages. Moishe represents, first and foremost, an earnest commitment to Judaism, and to Jewish mysticism in particular. As Eliezer’s Kabbalah teacher, Moishe talks ...

  5. After a decade of silence regarding his experiences during the Holocaust, Wiesel wrote Un di Velt Hot Geshvign which, two years and many revisions later, became the novel Night. Wiesel explains in his Preface to the text’s 2006 translation that despite his struggle to put the horrors he experienced into words, he felt a moral obligation to do so.

  6. Feb 11, 2014 · That is why I wrote that book. And that is why I wrote the others. First of all, to establish the prison. That there was a time when everything was a prison. Time itself was a prison. Afterwards, other words had to be found to break down the walls. Now some of you surely have been told that Night was a longer book. In fact, it was some 864 pages.

  7. Elie Wiesel 's Night is a haunting tale of 15-year-old Eliezer's experience with his father in the Auschwitz, Buchenwald, and Buna death camps, which were operated to control and kill Jewish ...

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