In the spring of 1944 it was difficult to imagine terrible acts of terrorism blessed with innocent people and the depths of Nazi evil. For Jews with a pious community of orthodox faith and spiritual lifestyle, people in concentration camps experience severely inhumane torture and painful behavior, so faith in God and for humanity Faith will be shaken at the heart. Since the creation of the world, Jews have often associated darkness (or night) with the absence of God. Therefore, Elie Wiesel encountered unimaginable atrocities in the process.
On the evening of Elie Wiesel, 'Hetler could not do anything to us, even if we wanted it.' So Elie Wiesel wrote an autobiographical work on Elie 's massacre struggle in several concentration camps started. . From the age of 15, Elie Wiesel raised the idea of casting doubts on German hatred from young men and became a witness to many inhuman acts. Elie Wiesel's book 'Night' explains the Jewish inhuman acts in Buna's Berkenau-Auswitz Jew and Gleiwitz parade.
Elie Wiesel Night is a memoir about the experience of the Holocaust era by Jewish boys Elie Wiesel. His favorite activity is to learn the Talmud and spend time with his spiritual tutor Moshe the Beadle at the temple. When I was very young, Erie was simple and confident for God. But this belief will be tried when the Nazis took him from his town. That night started in 1941. At that time, Erie was 12 years old. Erie is a diligent and respected boy who grew up in a small town called Shige of Transylvania and has affectionate parents and three sisters.
The book "Night" by Elie Wiesel is a reminiscence of the Holocaust about the author's experience during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel was born in Sighet in Transylvania in 1928. A book named "Night" is said by a boy named Eliezer. Eliezer is the representative of the author. Elie Wiesel said that the story is not about his experience, but most of the events in the novel are based on the life of Elie Wiesel. Elie and Eliezer's experience has subtle differences. This novel starts with Zeek in Transylvania.
The night of Elie Wiesel is an iconic book whose headline represents the pain, pain, and most important death witnessed by childhood experience in the concentration camp in Elie Wiesel. Elie Wiesel, born in Shige in Transylvania, is from the Jews and is very interested in traditional Jewish religious studies. The Wiesel family (related to his three sisters, mother and father) was eradicated at Siguet's house and brought to Auschwitz as part of the massacre. Eli separated from his mother and three sisters at the Auschwitz concentration camp, surviving in Auschwitz, Buna, Buchenwald, Gleevitz.