Dehumanization In Night Essay

Words: 592
Pages: 3

Nazis treated the Jewish race with torture and an overall mortifying experience. The act of dehumanization is a horrible thing and is what Elie Wiesel explains in the story of his young life, Night. Elie Wiesel and his father enter these concentration camps blind, unknowing of what is to come. They begin to see and smell awful things and realize it’s humans. The Nazis dehumanized the Jews mentally and physically to the point that it would have been nearly impossible to make a full recovery, if they were so fortunate to survive the abuse. Jewish victims had hope in them, they kept striving to live until they could not work any more. Tibi and Yossi were examples of hope, they tried to stick together and even had plans for after this torturous time in their life. “Let’s stay together. It will make us stronger” (Wiesel 71). Next, Elie says that people were glad to leave the sidewalks and were joyful. “There was joy, yes joy. People must have thought there could be no greater torment than that of being stranded here, on the sidewalk” (16). While some of these humans had hope, not everyone had hope and hope was important to survive during these harsh times. Every single human in concentration camps …show more content…
The very second the Nazis tattooed numbers onto the Jewish prisoners arms, they were robbed of their name and morals, what defines them as a human. “A-7713? That’s me” (51). Next, all of the valuable items, not just worth, but sentimental value, were taken away and never to be seen again on the cattle cars they were transported in. “The beloved objects that we carried with us from place to place were now left behind in the wagon, and with them, finally our illusions” (29). Through all of this torture combination of physical and moral dehumanization I feel that moral dehumanization was the worst because they no longer had any memories to think back on or look