How Did The Holocaust Change Elie Wiesel

Words: 583
Pages: 3

“The opposite of the love is not Hatred, but indifference.” Says Elie Wiesel the survivor of the world’s most terrible crime ever commented. Which is the Holocaust. Indifference is what caused of the war, and know Elie is paying for it dearly changing his life forever. Elie Wiesel, Author of Night, and several other books related to his experiences in the holocaust. States the actions, thoughts, and feelings in the holocaust, and how he was to survive. The holocaust took millions. While Elie had survive he was changed severely. The Holocaust changed Elie, it changed and destroyed his Identity, His faith, and view on humanity. Elie’s identity was forever shattered. “I quickly forgot him, I began to think of myself.” Elie stated in a part of the book as he was running with a person a person he knew, and his ‘friend’ dropped from dysentery. (Or what was believed to be dysentery.) “No more distractions it’s time to be selfish” He also stated. He had to forget everyone else, …show more content…
In the beginning Elie was asked by Moshie the Beadle “Why do you Weep when you cry.” In the beginning Elie was focused, motivated, and happy with his religion. “Why did I pray? Strange…I breathe?”(Page 2 Wiesel) He prayed without even thinking about it, he just prayed. He grew into it, thought it was a good thing. Worth his time. “Why sanify his name?” He began to question it as he arrived to Auschwitz. Seeing the children, Women, non-sinners being tortured, and slowly burned to death. It finally ended, and destroyed his faith, as he watched a young man struggling for breath, as he hung. The rope not snapping his neck, but suffocating him. “Blessed be in god’s name?” Elie snaps, and his religion burns to the ground. “Here he is-He is hanging here on this gallows.” It does make you think what God was doing, what lesson he was teaching, for all this terrible things to happen.” Like his Identity, and Faith his view on humanity flipped. Watching the evil in this world