When 60 to 90 strangers are confined in the car, there is little food and water, there is no room for movement, there are no places to go to the bathroom for several days, etc please imagine. I know when you will be able to go again. Every time someone dies, you must throw them out of a fast moving train, just as they are potato bags. This is the survival of the Holocaust and the experience of the book writer Erie Wiesel. Elie's book 'Night' detailed what he had experienced and led us through a terrible and wonderful trip of his own carnage.
Elie Wiesel: Survivor of the Holocaust Elie Wiesel wrote the life as a victim of the Holocaust in many novels in a mysterious and existential way. Selections such as "night" and "judgment of God" reveal the fear of concentration camps and the real idea of Wessel in the hell era that he encountered. Hell written by Wessel was released in his later life with his shock, sorrow, and incredible reasons. When writing a story, Elie Wiesel talks with a third party.
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.
Speaker Elie Wiesel is the winner of the Nobel Prize at the Holocaust Survivor. He experienced personal injustice and pain during the Holocaust. In 1944, in his teens, Wiesel and his family were expelled from the Nazis and forcibly repatriated to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. Wessel remembers slavery, starvation, and the face of strict discipline. • Wessel uses logic to show that 20th century unfairness will be tried during the new century. "These failures brought a shadow to humanity: two world wars, numerous civil wars, a chain of meaningless assassinations ... massacre in Cambodia, Nigeria, India, and Pakistan ... with inhuman acts of Gurug and Tragedy of Hiroshima ... Because it is very violent, indifference.