As Elie went on to talk about his experiences he explained how the Jews continued to be outcasted as if they weren’t even human beings which mean to dehumanize, they …show more content…
The abuse was so common that when the brutal incidents happened the other Jews wouldn’t even flinch. The reasons for this abuse could be the littlest thing like not marching in the correct order, getting more than their usual slice of bread, and even working slower than expected. Elie's father was one of the people who could not march in their correct space. This, of course, resulted in regular beatings by the Kapo the (Nazi’s law enforcement). What contributed to the Kapos targeting of Elie’s father was that Elie had a possession which was his crown which he refused to give up by any means. In an attempt to free his dad from this continuous abuse Elie tried to teach his father how to march but his father could not get the hang of this certain way of march. At a point, Elie could not take the sight of his dad getting continuously getting beat and gave up his crown. In the nights of the concentration camps, the Nazi’s would often have night runs( an exercise in which the Jew would have to run from concentration camps to concentration camps). The consequence of slowing down, of course, would be …show more content…
He experienced starvation and hard labor, with changing his mindset. The Jews hunger was not satisfied properly. They gave them bits of bread and the only got water from snow which led to starvation. They treated the Jews like labor machines. They had bad work and living conditions.Though the pain and struggling that Elie Wiesel and his fellow jews had to overcome (including his own family); the American resistance had finally come to the Jews rescue and the Nazis who had captured the Jews had finally eliminated. In this book, Elie share the experiences at the concentration camps him and his family had to go through .(where the jews stayed captive). For Elie, he was the only survivor in his family of the holocaust and he would be scarred for life and would lose his will to believe there was even a god. After all of these ups and downs, Wiesel eventually became a very successful