According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, six million Jews died in the Holocaust. Eliezer Wiesel was the Nobel Peace Prize winner in 1986. He is the author of the superb book Night. Eliezer Wiesel was living a contented life in his hometown of Sighet until the Nazis came and the people of Sighet were deported to concentration camps. Jewish people were being sent into concentration camps. Eliezer moved from camp to camp, while he witnessed terrible events. While Eliezer may have suffered through some of the terrible events alone, while his father, Shlomo, was there helping him along the way. The intricacies of this father-son relationship are evident throughout the entire novel.
The beginning of the story Wiesel …show more content…
When Eliezer and his father almost started arguing about who would stay on watch while the other person slept had emotional father son relationship. This was father son relationship because they were both caring for each other. This section of the book gives the reader a question in there minds, “How much care do you have to give to other people, and how much care do you have to give to yourself?” They stopped arguing quickly because they did not want to waste their energy. They both said, “Don’t be afraid, son ... Go to sleep”(Wiesel 95). A small part in the novel is when he worries about his father when is when Rabbi Eliahou could not find his father. Eliezer thought, “A terrible thought loomed up in my mind... which could lessen his own chance of survival” (Wiesel 97). This worrying created a feeling of happiness and sadness for the reader because the reader did not want Eliezer’s father to die, but when he did not flinch when his father got beat to him worrying about him has shown a huge increase in their relationship. A part of the story that is not about Eliezer and his father is when Meir was beating his father. Meir showed no mercy towards his father. He just kept hitting him for a piece of bread. His father was saying, “Meir. Meir, my boy! ... for you to.” He ended up being killed. The sun was starving and he could not stand it anymore. A few other men had the same idea when they were so hungry that they killed the boy for the bread. One of the last relationships between father and son is when Eliezer’s father died of dysentery. Wiesel’s father's last word was, “Eliezer”(Wiesel 116) This shows how much their relationship has grown since the beginning of the book. The beginning of the book he thought he did not care, but at the end he was so important that his name was his last word. He was very sad, but he never cried. He said, “I did not weep ... free at last! Wiesel might be sad that his father