Night by Elie Wiesel
Though it is called a novel, Night (Wiesel 1982) is actually a memoir about Wiesel's experiences as a young, devout Jewish boy who is forced by World War II Nazis into a concentration camp, along with his family. The main character, Eliezer, is actually Wiesel, and through his descriptions and thoughts about his life before, during and after the concentration camps, Wiesel illustrates ways that people may recognize evil and fight it by: listening to warnings, taking a side and acting; paying attention to evil as it tightens its grip on us; acting against the oppressor rather than the oppressed; remembering the terrible results of evil so we can fight it in the future.
Idea(s) Developed by Wiesel about Circumstances Compelling Individuals to Respond
One idea that Wiesel develops is the idea that we should listen to people who have experienced evil and warn us about it, then take a side and act. At the beginning of Night, Eliezer, the main character and narrator of the book, is a devout Jewish 12-year-old boy, the 3rd of 4 children whose parents ran a shop in Sighet, Transylvania (Wiesel 1982, 1-2). Eliezer's "place was at school" (Wiesel 1982, 2) and his "cultured, rather unsentimental" father tries to find...
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