Preview

Night Character List

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
256 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Night Character List
Characterization Chart Will Karaman

Elie Wiesal - The narrator of Night and the stand-in for the memoir’s author, Elie Wiesel. Night traces Eliezer’s psychological: journey, as the Holocaust robs him of his faith in God and exposes him to the deepest inhumanity of which man is capable.
Social: Despite many tests of his humanity, however, Eliezer maintains his devotion to his father. It is important to note that we learn Eliezer’s last name only in passing, and that it is never repeated.
Physcial :His story—which parallels Wiesel’s own biography—is intensely personal, but it is also representative of the experiences of hundreds of thousands of Jewish teenagers
Found on pages 22,15,38,45
Moshe the Beadle -
Physcial:Eliezer’s teacher of Jewish mysticism, Moshe is a poor Jew who lives in Sighet.
Social: He is deported before the rest of the Sighet Jews but escapes and returns to tell the town what the Nazis are doing to the Jews.
Physcialoglaclly Tragically, the community takes Moshe for a lunatic. found on pages 4,8,12,16,24,37
Mister Wiesel : social: In the beginning of the story, Wiesel's father was like the patriarch not just to the family, but to the community as well. physcialogly : When the Germans occupied Sighet, the neighbors would sought the advice of Wiesel's father because he wasn't least afraid of what the Germans had in store.
Physcial: He encouraged everyone to have a positive outlook for it was the the 20th century.
Found on pages

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    and is left with his father. Wiesel depicts his father as an unsentimental man who…

    • 403 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    He worked at the Hasidic synagogue. He was able to make himself seem insignificant, almost invisible. He was timid, with dreamy eyes, and did not speak much.…

    • 1758 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Dtq- Story Night

    • 268 Words
    • 2 Pages

    3. How do the people Wiesel interacts with strengthen or diminish his hope and desire to live? Talk about his father and the other “inmates” of Auschwitz. Which of their actions provide a significant change in Wiesel? Provide examples from the text.…

    • 268 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the beginning of his memoir, Elie Wiesel had a distant relationship with his father. Wiesel mentions that “he rarely displayed his feelings, not even with his family” his father kept to himself and didn't open up to anybody, causing an unhealthy relationship with his son, Eliezer Wiesel. He later goes on and says, “he was always more involved with the welfare of others than with that of his own kin” Wiesel’s…

    • 301 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    In his memoire, Night, one of Eliezer Wiesel’s main themes is how the relationship between fathers and sons is drastically changed over the course of imprisonment and in different ways. At the beginning of the book, new prisoners hold on to the only thing they have: their family. For some people, the only thing that gives them the will to keep living is the knowledge that their family is still alive, or the need to help their families. The most prominent family relationship in the camps (mostly because the women were exterminated immediately) is that between father and son. As the book progresses and the suffering intensifies, however, many changes are seen in this father-son bond. One of these changes, brought on by the inner struggle between self-preservation and love, is shown when the son begins to view his own father as a burden. After the mad run to Gleiwitz, in which prisoners who could not keep up were shot immediately, Rabbi Eliahu goes around inquiring of the resting prisoners the whereabouts of his son. Eliezer tells him that he doesn’t know where his son is, but later remembers that his son had been beside him during the run. He realizes that the son had known that his father was losing ground, but did nothing about it because he knew his father’s survival would diminish the chances for his own. After this realization Elie prays, “Oh God, Master of the Universe, give me the strength never to do what Rabbi Eliahu’s son has done” (Page 91). Later on, however, while his father is dying, Elie finds himself grudgingly taking care of him, and is ashamed that he has failed what he had previously prayed to do. One day, Elie’s father begins calling out to him for water, and an officer starts beating him to keep him silent. He keeps calling out to Elie, not feeling the blows or hearing the shouts; Elie, however, remains still, fearing that the next blow will be for him if he interferes. The next morning, he finds his father replaced with another sick…

    • 1107 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    We are first introduced to a very-observant, jewish-boy, of fifteen in the Transylvanian town of Sighet. He is, in essence, a child. All…

    • 543 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pathos In Night

    • 493 Words
    • 2 Pages

    While describing the rough times he and his father go through in the concentration camps, Wiesel makes sure to use imagery that would make the audience feel sorry and despair. For example, when Wiesel states, “never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies turned into wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky”, it gives the reader a sense of uneasiness and empathy for the author as he had to experience the cremating of children’s bodies. One of Wiesel’s main goals when writing this narrative was to reach the readers heart so they could get a sense of what it was like to witness the environment surrounding the concentration camp.…

    • 493 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Night: Inhumanity/Genocide

    • 1386 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Night, a memoir written by Elie Wiesel, is about a young boy and his experience in the concentration camps during the Holocaust. This young boy, Elie Wiesel, starts of as a religiously devout Jew that lives in a small community of Sighet, Hungarian Transylvania. In the spring of 1944, his close knit family of his parents and three sisters are deported to Birkenau. Elie is separated from his mother and his sisters at the arrival of the concentration camps. After a short stay, Elie and his father are transported to Auschwitz, Buna, and eventually Birkenau. They meet many others in the concentration camps. Idek, a Kapo, was very violent to the Jews although he was also a victim in the Holocaust; Elie feels his wrath at one point in the book. Throughout the course of Chlomo (Elie's father) and Elie's journey, they are dehumanized by being branded, beaten, starved, and forced to work past their limit. They watch many others die through the work of Germans, Kapos, and even other Jews. Ultimately, they were stripped of all their pride. Elie managed to survive it all, however, and was liberated on April 11, 1945.…

    • 1386 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The main character and the author in the book, Night is Elie Wiesel. The book Night is about a family going to a concentration camp called Auschwitz. Elie has to make some major life choices. Also, how he changes a lot throughout the story is very noticeable.…

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Elie Wiesel's Survival

    • 107 Words
    • 1 Page

    During the Holocaust, over 11 million people were killed. 1.1 million were children and 6 million were Jewish. In the novel titled, “Night” by Elie Wiesel, he speaks about a young boy named Elie Wiesel. This novel also explained his thoughts/feelings during the tragic event. During, Elie Wiesel lost his mother when the Holocaust started and lost his father at the end of the Holocaust. Three qualities that contributed to Wiesel’s survival was his intelligence, when he hid his left arm, his bravery, when he refused to separate from his father during the selection, and his determination, when he decided to not stop running during the flee.…

    • 107 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    He clutches onto his father’s hand and naively denies that the world could stand by silently and allow the Germans to slaughter the Jews. However, within moments of his arrival at the camp, he witnesses the horrific reality that murders his childhood and innocence. Wiesel sees babies and children being thrown into fire pits and soon after states, “Never shall I forget the nocturnal silence that deprived me, for all eternity, of the desire to live” (Wiesel 43). At this point in time, the murders he witnesses disgust him. He is absolutely mortified. Throughout the novel, there are many other moments that Wiesel struggles with his moral views, and the longer he is in the camp, the more detached he becomes. For instance, after a man was shot down for falling behind in their forty-two mile run between camps, Wiesel states that, “I soon forgot him. I began to think of myself again” (92). Wiesel starts to become self-focused like most of the other prisoners. He lives in constant fear, and staying alive is the only thing he has the time or energy to worry about. Survival literally becomes his only goal. Unlike before, when he witnesses this murder, he keeps moving. Death was something that he was used to seeing. His self-preserving mentality is shown to a further extent when his father is killed. Oblivious to his surroundings, Wiesel’s father continuously calls out to him for water, but Wiesel ignores him. In the…

    • 1037 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Night by Elie Wiesel

    • 1383 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The ground is frozen, parents weep over their children, stomachs void, rigid bodies huddle together to stay warm. This was a reoccurring scene during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel’s Night describes the horror of what the Holocaust did, not only to the Jews, but to humanity. The disturbing neglect the Nazi party had for human beings, and the human body itself, still to this day, intensifies the fear in the hearts of many. Men, woman, and children alike witnessed selfish, dehumanizing acts, the deaths of their friends and family, and not only the loss of faith in God, but in everything.…

    • 1383 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Night

    • 406 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Elie could not accept that his merciful God could let such a cruelty happen without doing anything against it. So he felt connected to the young servant boy because he also underwent a similar slow and painful spiritual death but instead of the young pipel his merciful God was hanging on the gallon, murdered by the Nazis and witnessed by him. Additionally the death of the young boy symbolized the death of Eliezer’s childhood caused by his completely transformed and shattered world view. He had lost his naive thinking and the faith in mankind because he realized that not everyone around him was moral or kind since not even the SS decreased the punishment for the young pipel. As well his ideal of a…

    • 406 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Elie Wiesel

    • 1624 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Elie Wiesel, a strong, courageous man, was subject to onerous acts in his childhood, yet in his present day, he discusses topics, such as hatred, all around the world with teenagers and adults(“Having Survived” 1). Born in Sighet, Transylvania on September 30, 1928, Wiesel lived an unexampled childhood(Berenbaum 2). In a lecture, he once said, “When human lives are endangered, when human dignity is in jeopardy.. Wherever men or women are persecuted because of their race, religion or political views, that place must--at the moment-- become the center of the universe”(“Having Survived” 4). This quote symbolizes Wiesel’s view of the treacherous Holocaust, an event that changed mankind(“Having Survived” 4). As conditions of living began to change around Europe, 15 year old Wiesel’s life took a 360 degree turn for the worse when he and his family were taken to one of the many concentration camps set up by the NAZI leaders, at Birkenau and Auschwitz(Berenbaum 2). Wiesel was kept at this camp until January 1945, when at that point, he was sent with thousands of other Jewish prisoners to Buchenwald in a forced death…

    • 1624 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    the book night

    • 1753 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Elie Wiesel wrote the novel “Night”. This novel was based on his experiences as a Jewish child during the holocaust. Wiesel was one of four children, he had 2 older sisters and 1 younger sister. They grew up in Romania with their mother and father. In 1940 during the war his father was invited to a meeting where they discovered the Germany army was transporting everyone in his town to ghettos. In may of 1944 the German authorities deported most of the Jewish community to Aushwitz concentration camp.In this concentration camp he was separated from his mother and three sisters,but he did remain with his father for a majority or his time spent in the concentration camps.When they arrived at aushwitz they were taken to a shower to strip of all clothing and disinfect, then they were sent to the barber and then sent to get their number tattooed on their arm . Their identity was completely confiscated from them.Elie worked hard and remained as healthy as he possibly could or could seem so him and his father would last the constant checks. Elies father was nearly dead at the end but could only manage to keep him alive for so long before the guards realize he was not useful. Elies father was killed two weeks before American troops invaded aushwitz and slowly saved the remaining Jewish prisoners. When out Elie found out that his father, his mother, and his youngest sister did not survive.…

    • 1753 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays