Night By Elie Wiesel Analysis

Words: 635
Pages: 3

Elie Wiesel never wanted to believe that German police and soldiers could do the horrible things he'd heard of them doing. Not only did he not want to believe it, no, he just couldn't. He couldn't believe the things he was hearing. Jews being forced to stay in their houses, then forced to leave days later, soldiers even killing Jews on trains. Elie and his family lived in Sighet, where there were two ghettos. A large ghetto in the center of the town that occupied four streets, and a smaller one extending over several small side streets in the rest of the district. He had lived inside the first ghetto, on serpent street in their own house. The windows had to be blocked up because they faced the outside streets. They had thought of themselves …show more content…
His father had been telling the people his opinion on Hungarian police taking expensive things from the Jews and not allowing them to have anything worth money, when suddenly, a policeman named Stern came in and took his father aside. He had told him to come to a meeting of the council. His father came back pale and unable to find words to speak. He told them that all the Jews were being deported. The ghetto was to be completely empty and left. They were going to be taken somewhere to Hungary to work in brick factories. Everyone in the ghetto started to wake their families up so that they could all pack and get ready to leave. Elie's backyard had started to seem like a marketplace. Household treasures, bibles, and other religious things had been scattered all over the ground. By eight o'clock in the morning, Hungarian police had entered the ghetto and were shouting in the streets ordering all the Jews to come outside. Every person of each family had to carry one bag with some of their belongings in each one. The day that everyone had to leave for the camps, they were woken up and had to march to a train station to find a convoy of cattle wagons. There were eighty people to a car. There were bars in the cars to make sure the people were shut in and couldn't escape. In each car, one person was put in charge, if someone tried to escape, the person in charge were to shoot