Elie’s father continuously pushed Elie to keep working during the days and not give up even for a small break or nap. When the Jews were told to ran for hours to a new camp, because the one they were at was going to be liberated, Elie never stopped running. He knew if he quit now that his father would too and they would be left behind to die alone, so Elie kept running to stay alive with his father. When Elie's father didn’t think he was going to live through the next selection, he wanted to give Elie his inheritance to help him as much as he could, while he could. In the text Eli told his father, “Keep the spoon and the knife. You need them as much as I do. We shall see each other again this evening, after work” (81). If Elie would have taken the small but generous inheritance from his father, it would’ve been like allowing his father to give up and if Elie wasn’t allowed to quit, he wasn’t going to let his father quit. Elie was very dependent on his father and wanted his father to know that they were going to get through this horrific situation together, even if that means they were going to fight against death