
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Chapter 9

Chapter 8
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Chapter 7

On the train ride, dead corpses are thrown out. Two prisoners try to throw Elie’s father out but he convinces the men that his father is still alive. In all, twenty bodies are thrown out of the train, "leaving behind it a few hundred naked dead, deprived of burial, in the deep snow of a field in Poland." As they have no rations, the only food available is snow. After ten days of travel, a German workman throws a piece of bread into the passing wagon. There is a stampede for the morsel of bread. The German workman finds the melee interesting. (Elie Wiesel recalls years later, at Aden, a similar situation where some woman throws coins for the native boys). Elie even witnesses a boy named Meir kill his own father over a piece of bread. After the son seizes the bread from his father, he too is killed by other hungry prisoners. Elie watches the resulting sight with horror: "When they withdrew, next to me were two corpses, side by side, the father and the son. I was fifteen years old.
One night, on the train ride, a stranger tries to strangle Elie. His father calls for his friend, Meir Katz, and he comes and saves Elie. Although Meir Katz is the most robust of them all, he begins to lose hope. After keeping his emotions in check up to this time, Meir Katz finally weeps over his son, a victim of the first selection. As an icy wind starts to blow, someone dying lets out a loud wail. It becomes contagious and soon, everyone starts to cry and wail. Elie can only dread: "All limits had been passed. No one had any strength left. And again the night would be long." At last, the train reaches its final destination, Buchenwald. Meir Katz does not make it. A hundred prisoners begin the trip; only a dozen survive, including Elie and his father.
A bit rediculous, isn't it? even with my knowledge of these events, it's still horrific. The howling sends chills down your spine, doesn't it?
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Chapter 6

After covering tens of miles, they are finally allowed to rest. Many prisoners find their way into a brick factory, including Elie and his father. Elie falls asleep. They are forced back outside, and re-enter a shed. They sit there for a little while. A rabbi walks in, looking for his son. Elie says he hasn't seen his son, but then remembers that he had seen his son purposely run away from him. He prays to God that he doesn't become like the son.
They start to march once more. They walk for hours until they reach Gleiwitz, in which they are thrown into overcrowded barracks where they are forced to lay on top of eachother. But here he heres the voice of his frend Juliek. But the man on top of Elie almost suffocates him and he barely frees himself. He heres the sound of Juliek's violin. The next day Juliek is dead.
After three days in the barracks without food or water, they are forced to march once more away from the advancing Russians. Another selection is made, and Elie's father is chosen. Elie manages to distract the Germans and his father sneaks back over. They wait for the train, eat their bread, and melt snow for water. The trains arrive.
That's a little odd. Elie prays to God for something. What God? The God that he belittled and questioned so much?
Here is what I think. The Russian advancement not only gives hope to the Jews for freedom, but the thought of freedom and hope gives the Jews a revitalization of their faith. Elie manages to keep his father with him. This can only play out as an advantage as things progress (that is, if he can keep out of trouble). It almost seems as if things are getting better perhaps?
We were masters of nature, masters of the world. We had forgotten everything-death, fatigue, our natural needs. Stronger than cold or hunger, stronger than the shots and the desire to die, condemned and wandering, mere numbers, we were the only men on earth.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Chapter 5

Monday, May 19, 2008
Chapter 4

Eliezer, after he and his father arive to Buna, is called to the dentist who wishes to pull his crowns out (he was later hanged because he traded the gold teeth), and Eliezer gets out of this by faking sick. Elizer does not pity him. Eliezer encounters many problems with Idek, who was in charge of the unit. He beats him violently, but recieves confort when a French girl tried to console him (they later bump into eachother on a train in Paris; she was a Jew but worked i the warehouse as a laborer and not a prisoner). Idek also beats his father. Eliezer is angry at his father instead of Idek.
Then, an air raid strikes the camp. Two containers of soup are left in the open. A prisoner tries to reach the soup, and fails and dies from a gunshot. The Nazis build gallows and have their first hangings, in which the people who tried to steal thins during the air raid are hanged. Among them is a young boy who was basically innocent. The Jews by now are used to not crying, but everyone cannot help but weep at the site of the young boy struggling to stay alive.
This chapter summarizes all the things that had been happening into one chapter. His relationship is important with his father. However, as seen in the earlier chapters, the Nazis treating the Jews as nonhumans make them act as nonhumans towards eachother. When Eliezer sees his father get beat, not only does he not help, but he gets mad at his father (this is because he natural instincts have been stripped; the instinct to feel compassion for his father is gone and maybe even reversed).
The idea of being consoled also present. The French woman that he meets comforts him in his time of need. However, Eliezer is losing his faith. Akiba Drumer is the exact opposite of Eliezer's character. Akiba is surviving on faith alone, where Elizer's faith is being shapen into a smaller ball every day he is there. This is especially harmful when he sees the young boy being hanged, which almost destroys his faith completely.
At this point, in my mind, it's make or break for Eliezer. One more big impact could put him over the edge.
Friday, May 16, 2008
Chapter 3

Uncertainty is still spreading through the Jewish captives (they did not know at the time that they were being sent to work). While they are moving through the camp, they see pits where adults and babies are burned. No one can believe what they are seeing. Everyone breaks down and starts to weep. They start to recite the Kaddish, except for Eliezer, who doesn’t fully understand why God is being thanked.
They enter the barracks, are shaved, disinfected, showered, and clothed. A Nazi German gives them a briefing, and Eliezer’s father asks for a bathroom. He is brutally beaten by the head prisoner, and Eliezer blames himself for not standing up for him. They march to Auschwitz, where they live for a little bit and have their arms branded. Their relative informs them that his family is doing well. They learn that this is not true. Then they are escorted to Buna, the work camp. Their faith in God is still strong.
Eliezer’s doubt starts to form and accumulate during the chapter in the Auschwitz camp. It’s a subtle change, but a change none-the-less. He questions why the prisoners are thanking God (when they were walking by the adults and babies being burned). However, this is directly contrasting the beliefs of the other prisoners, who keep a strong faith throughout. Not only does he doubt God, but he doubts himself. His own faith in mankind. The Kapo beats his father, while Eliezer just watches. His silence makes him possess a feeling of guilt, and results in an almost beat down of his morality. According the Wiesel, silence in the wake of evil allows it to thrive.
The night was gone. The morning star was shining in the sky. I too had become a completely different person. The student of the Talmud, the child that I was, had become consumed in the flames. There remained only a shape that looked like me. A dark flame had entered into my soul and devoured it
I did not deny God's existence, but i doubted His absolute justice
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Chapter 2

The most notable character from this chapter is surely Madame Schächter, who is along with her ten-year-old son. She cracks underneath the harsh treatment, and starts screaming that she sees a fire outside. The Jews onboard become terrified, but soon comfort themselves by saying that she is crazy. She is tied up so she cannot scream, and her child watches and weeps. When she screams once more, she is beaten (by her own people, who support this action)
They finally reach Auschwitz. They are told that they’re at a labor camp, but that families will be kept together. This comforts the prisoners even further, but later Madame again starts to scream until beaten into a violent silence. The Jewish prisoners finally see their fate: the furnaces, barbed wire, and the smell of burnt flesh of the Bikenau camp.
The biggest idea present in the novel at this point is the cruelty towards humans. The Nazis cause, by treating the Jews as less than humans, them to do act as less than humans. Without societies laws, dignity, and deprivation of basic human rights, the Jews are exposed to a great dehumanization (notice: when in their ghettos, the Jews possessed at least a decent respect for one another and a large base of faith). The best example is when Madame’s fellow prisoners beat her up. I understand that it was to silence her (her rants made them scared), but to ruthless beat her with the support and encouragement of other prisoners is wrong.
Again the disbelief continues. The character of Madame is paralleled to Moshe (see the blog for chapter 1 for Moshe’s story).
However, as seen throughout history, the Jews try to reconcile themselves with an optimistic outlook and faith. During the Babylonian Exile, the Jews kept their faith strong by writing down the stories that had been passed down throughout generations orally. The Jews on the train, when Madame screams and yells, soothe themselves by calling her crazy. The Jews comfort themselves by knowing their families will be kept together in the labor camps.
'Listen to me, kid. Don’t forget that you are in a concentration camp. In this place, it is every man for himself, and you cannot think of others. Not even your father. In this place, there is no such thing as father, brother, friend. Each of us lives and dies alone.' (110)
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Chapter 1

But then Hungarian falls into fascism. German armies occupy Hungary, and soon move into Sighet. Community leaders are arrested, valuables are confiscated, and (perhaps the most famous of them all) they are forced to wear yellow stars. They are eventually forced into small ghettos and harsh living conditions.
The Nazis begin their 'cleansing' by deporting Jews little by little. Eliezer and his family are the last to go. They (meaning Eli and his family) watch as their fellow Jews are forced into crowded streets carrying little. His family is herded into another ghetto, even smaller. Martha offers to hide them in her village, but recieves a no. The last of the Jewish community is herded up and are bound for Auschwitz.
When reading this first chapter, I could not help but to ask how circumstances come into effect. Eli happens to be living in Hungary (or anywhere in Europe, for that matter), how they really had no means of knowing what was really going on, how ignorance led to the refusal of the offer to be sheltered. Naturalism, anyone?
'What can we expect? It's war...'
'The yellow star? Oh well, what of it? You don't die of it...'
Foreward

Elie tells of the horrific events at Holocaust. Muriac did not see the events himself, and had to have been shocked and appalled when Elie reveals that he was one of the children crammed into the trains and 'evacuated'. In Muriac's thoughts, he could not believe that any of it happened. But he comes to realize that it did; and to many others as well. Elie's story is a personal story, deeply rooted in personal experience, both physically and spiritually. It can be compared to that of Anne Frank, a German Jew.
Muriac also sees that the physical destruction isn't nearly as present as his spiritual depression. Many others experience the same loss of religion, in which one questions: how can God let something happen like this? Muriac is deeply affected by Elie's crisis of faith, in which the rest of the novel will explain. Muriac, however, sees suffering as a cornerstone of faith.
Mauriac concludes, and the power of Wiesel’s story, mostly the intensity of his spiritual crisis, overwhelmed him, and, struck speechless, he wept.
'Where is God? Where is He?' someone behind me asked... For more than half an hour [the child in the noose] stayed there, struggling between life and death, dying in slow agony under our eyes. And we had to look him full in the face. He was still alive when I passed in front of him. His tongue was still red, his eyes were not yet glazed. Behind me, I heard the same man asking:'Where is God now?' And I heard a voice within me answer him: 'Where is He? Here He is—He is hanging here on this gallows...'
Preface

It tells of how unforgettable and haunting (for lack of a better term) and grueling the concentration camp was for him, and how it almost makes life worth not living just from the sights and sounds of his people being 'purified' as the Natzis would say. The movie Conspiracy gave a great presentation of how the Germans felt and dealt with the Jews. Not only this, but certainly above all, their hatred for a people who had done no wrong towards them.
Being at the extermination camps is indescribable for Elie.
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. Never shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever. 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.