Night and dawn book review "I will never forget the seven curses, seven seals on the first night of a camp that made my life a long night that night, I will never forget that smoke. I will never forget a small wreath under the blue sky, I will never forget the flames that lose my faith never forget the silence of the night I was deprived of surviving forever.I will never forget my God and my soul I will never forget the moment of killing and turning my dream into dust.
The book I read in book review is Dawn, Good-bye to Erie Wiesel. This story represents the battle of Israeli freedom fighters after the Second World War - especially the young man who found himself behind the gun. Wiesel himself interrupted the time at Auschwitz concentration camp and Buchenwald's death camp during the war, and he was writing a memoir of his experience in the past. In my opinion, the purpose of this book is to express Elisha 's innermost thoughts and pain. It is Elisha. 18-year-old. He was hired by a gentleman named Gad and he turned him into a fighter plane. He was killing for their career, but only in the group - never one. "... our bullets are burning walls, their lives are broken ... me and my five comrades have been killed or begun to be killed" Pg 28. But now, Elisha is not a group. He compensated British officials, executing John Dawson and capturing David Ben Moshe with their own persons for British people.
Night and dawn book review "I will never forget the seven curses, seven seals on the first night of a camp that made my life a long night that night, I will never forget that smoke. I will never forget a small wreath under the blue sky, I will never forget the flames that lose my faith never forget the silence of the night I was deprived of surviving forever.I will never forget my God and my soul I will never forget the moment of killing and turning my dream into dust.
On the last page of the night, he stood in front of the mirror and saw a bleached skull-like face. Even dawn, this day will not be open - the whole book is to fight the darkness of the night. This question was always the same painful question: "How can you make a meaningful life under this painful memory weight?" German philosophers say that memory is eternal pain Is it correctly pointed out that it is for? service? Is there a way to advance one day ahead?