Eliezer Wiesel lost faith in God, family, and humanity through experience in Nazi concentration camps. Eli Xie lost faith in God. He struggled for life physically and mentally and did not believe to have a god anymore. "I will never forget the moment of killing my God and my soul and turning my dream into dust" (p. 32). Erie tried to rescue himself and asked God to save himself from pain by repeatedly helping God. "Why should I bless his name, forever the owner of the universe, omnipotent and frightening people are silent ..." (p. 31).
Eli Wiesel's "Night" night's faith loss is a dramatic book about fear and evil of concentration camps many were imprisoned during World War II. Everywhere in the book, the writer Elie Wiesel and many prisoners have lost their faith in God. There are many examples at the beginning of the night, people try to maintain and strengthen their beliefs, but there are more examples that people disregard God and forget their religion. The first example of Erie's loss of faith was when he arrived in Auschwitz.
The night of Elie Wiesel 's novel. Next, I will explain the scene in the movie "Schindler" list. Finally, the book I discuss is a faithful elephant of Yukio Tsuchiya. In the evening written by Elie Wiesel, he wrote his own experience while living in a concentration camp during the Holocaust. Eli witnessed a very inhumane crime, which made him guess the second belief in God. When he arrived in the Auschwitz concentration camp, he began witnessing a hole full of burning babies. Elie Wiesel says, "During the Second World War, why did you talk about Jewish experience in concentration camps, similar rituals, victims and prisoners show different reactions, black gallows, sharp Instructions, strange background shows that the problem is close.
English March 4th In the memoir of Elie Wiesel celebrating dawn on January 26, 2015, he explained his experience at the Nazi concentration camp during the massacre of the 1940s. I lost my faith in God. He grew up in a community with many Jews and he was surrounded by spirituality since childhood. His spiritual death in the concentration camp is a prominent theme of the book. Weisell's first devotion to the god and his faith