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laila [671]
3 years ago
5

NEED HELP FAST WORTH 100 POINTS!!

English
2 answers:
jeka57 [31]3 years ago
8 0

Explanation:

''The Night'' is considering the description of a journey of a writer Elie Wiesel and his father in a concentration camp at Auschwitz.

  1. At the beginning of the book, his faith was different than at the end. At first,  he was curious about the Jewish religion and God's death. <u>He had faith at the beginning, in God, in family, and humanity but later on he lost his faith in everything. </u>One of the moments in the book where we can see that that may be one of the beginning of losing his faith was when he heard one man behind him saying ''For God’s sake, where is God?’ And from within me, I heard a voice answer: ‘Where He is? This is where-hanging here from this gallows…” when the little boy was dying. At the end of the story, he lost his faith in everything and everyone. He was not the only one who lost his faith, all of the Jews were starting to lose their faith in God and families and later on faith in humanity. They were asking themselves “Were there still miracles on this earth?” and they have begun to think that there are no more good things on the earth. ''Never shall I forget that nocturnal silence which deprived me, for all eternity, of the desire to live. Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust. Never shall I forget these things, even if I am condemned to live as long as God Himself. Never'
  2. <em>a) </em>The first symbol that we can recognize when we are analyzing this Novel is a symbol of the title. <u>The Night</u> is symbolizing the death of an innocence, death of childhood, death and the end of faith, death of many people, death and the end of possible miracles. Since they lost their faith in God, the night also means a world without God and faith because they are representing brightness.''Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky.'' <em>b)</em>The second symbol is <u>fire</u> and <u>flames</u> of it. They are representing hell and tool for punishing them which brought them to losing his faith. ''Never shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever.''
  3. I think that no one can really understand what the author Elie Wiesel and other Jews experienced in the concentration camp. I consider that he did a great and successful job when he was describing his experience because he included every detail of it including God, miracles, and faith. I was feeling sad, anxious, curious and angry when I was reading this book. I hope that will never happen again and no one in this world should lose his faith.

Margaret [11]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Eliezer’s struggle with his faith is a dominant conflict in Night. At the beginning of the work, his faith in God is absolute. When asked why he prays to God, he answers, “Why did I pray? . . . Why did I live? Why did I breathe?” His belief in an omnipotent, benevolent God is unconditional, and he cannot imagine living without faith in a divine power. But this faith is shaken by his experience during the Holocaust.

Initially, Eliezer’s faith is a product of his studies in Jewish mysticism, which teach him that God is everywhere in the world, that nothing exists without God, that in fact everything in the physical world is an “emanation,” or reflection, of the divine world. In other words, Eliezer has grown up believing that everything on Earth reflects God’s holiness and power. His faith is grounded in the idea that God is everywhere, all the time, that his divinity touches every aspect of his daily life. Since God is good, his studies teach him, and God is everywhere in the world, the world must therefore be good.

Eliezer’s faith in the goodness of the world is irreparably shaken, however, by the cruelty and evil he witnesses during the Holocaust. He cannot imagine that the concentration camps’ unbelievable, disgusting cruelty could possibly reflect divinity. He wonders how a benevolent God could be part of such depravity and how an omnipotent God could permit such cruelty to take place. His faith is equally shaken by the cruelty and selfishness he sees among the prisoners. If all the prisoners were to unite to oppose the cruel oppression of the Nazis, Eliezer believes, then maybe he could understand the Nazi menace as an evil aberration. He would then be able to maintain the belief that humankind is essentially good. But he sees that the Holocaust exposes the selfishness, evil, and cruelty of which everybody—not only the Nazis, but also his fellow prisoners, his fellow Jews, even himself—is capable. If the world is so disgusting and cruel, he feels, then God either must be disgusting and cruel or must not exist at all.

Though this realization seems to annihilate his faith, Eliezer manages to retain some of this faith throughout his experiences. At certain moments—during his first night in the camp and during the hanging of the pipel—Eliezer does grapple with his faith, but his struggle should not be confused with a complete abandonment of his faith. This struggle doesn’t diminish his belief in God; rather, it is essential to the existence of that belief. When Moshe the Beadle is asked why he prays, he replies, “I pray to the God within me that He will give me the strength to ask Him the right questions.” In other words, questioning is fundamental to the idea of faith in God. The Holocaust forces Eliezer to ask horrible questions about the nature of good and evil and about whether God exists. But the very fact that he asks these questions reflects his commitment to God.

Discussing his own experience, Wiesel once wrote, “My anger rises up within faith and not outside it.” Eliezer’s struggle reflects such a sentiment. Only in the lowest moments of his faith does he turn his back on God. Indeed, even when Eliezer says that he has given up on God completely, Wiesel’s constant use of religious metaphors undercuts what Eliezer says he believes. Eliezer even refers to biblical passages when he denies his faith. When he fears that he might abandon his father, he prays to God, and, after his father’s death, he expresses regret that there was no religious memorial. At the end of the book, even though he has been forever changed by his Holocaust experience, Eliezer emerges with his faith intact.

Explanation:

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