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Friday, March 22, 2019

Night Essay -- essays research papers

In reading, Night by Elie Wiesel and A Mans Search For Meaning by , many stories of the torturous feeling in the concentration camps during the second world war. In each book, the reader buy the farms a different point of view from each book because in Night, you get to read about a teenagers view and in the book, A Mans Search For Meaning, you get to read about a middle immemorial mans view. In the book, Night, Elie, his family and his community go through a system of indoctrination which in each touchstone it makes you visualizem less and less of a human. The archetypical step is that the Hungarian police made entirely the Judaic peck wear yellow stars, so they could be picked out easily. The future(a) step is that all the Jewish the great unwashed had to get rid of all their worthful belongings. The coterminous step in the system is moving all the Jewish people to the ghettos either in the large one or the smaller one. Elie and his family was moved to the large one. The future(a) step is that Elie and his family had to move to the small ghetto where they were get ready to leave or be sent some where else. The next step of the system is everyday they take a certain tally of Jewish people into the center of the town square and and thence they allow them sit there for a while. The next step was that they had to walk to the tabernacle and then they had to walk to train after being in the synagogue for a day. Once they reach the train, the Hungarian police put eighty people in a thirty person train car. The next step is the long trip on the train, where people start expiration crazy, people non getting fed well and no dwell to sit. Life in the camp, the next step is when the train arrives at Auschwitz and then SS hands ordered everyone out and makes them leave their personal stuff behind. The next step they separated the men from the women and children, this was a point where families were separated and more or less of the families neve r saw each other again. Elie never saw his bugger off and his sisters again. He could have stay with his mother but he told the SS men that he was eighteen years old and that was better because the most people they killed were children. The older people got to live longer because they thought that they ordain all die because of the way they were treating them bad, by not feeding and making them hold longer hours. The next step was to separate the handicapped from the normal. After that the immature and old are separ... ...members are waiting for them when they get out or someone needs them to be alive, so they could survive another day. Frankl dialogue about how everyone has something inside them that they want to live for, but if they cannot see that then someone will have tell them about it. Frankl opines that we should all see our something that makes us want to live because life is very valuable and you cannot well(p) let it go like that. In the reading of both these boo ks, I have well-educated many things about the human race. I learned how cruel it can be and how fragile it can be. I believe that if I was in a position of either being a prisoner, a SS man or a Kapo, I really do not know how I would act. If I was a SS man, I believably would have listen my conscience and done everything in my power to get out of that position. If I was a prisoner, I would probably do everything in my power to live and survive the camps. If I was a Kapo, I would not treated my follow men bad so that I will not face any harm. Even though I forecast I would have done these things if I was in those positions, I probably would have done something else because I can never really derive the situation and the experience of it.

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