Explanation:
I am surrounded by people in my examination hall. Some people seem confident enough to attempt all the questions whereas some people look so nervous to even look into the questions. Teachers have kept an eye on everyone. This has to be fearful for students while giving exams especially when we don't know the answers and it contains higher marks. I'm pretty confident and nervous so that means there are questions that I know and questions that I don't know. I'm still going to try my best to attempt all the questions.
One of Wiesel's concerns in Night is the way that exposure to inhuman cruelty can deprive even victims of their sense of morality and humanity. The first hint of this dehumanized behavior on the part of the Jewish prisoners comes when some of the deportees, in the contraints of the cattle car, lose their modesty and sense of sexual, inhibition. Wiesel suggests that one of the great psychological and moral tragedies of the Holocaust is not just the death of faith in God but also the death in faith in humankind.<span>
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He read his textbooks carefully and made concept maps to help him remember the details.