In the first chapter he is talking about a conversation he had with a strange man named Moishe the Beadle. The man came back into town talking about how he was miraculously saved and to warn the people of what was coming. In the book it talks about how the Moishe was so desperate to save the people, it states “ “They think I’m mad,” he whispered, and tears, like drops of wax, flowed from his eyes.”(Wiesel, 1958, p. 7). Later on throughout the book the people begin to realize what Moishe the Beadle was so desperately sharing was accurate. Little did they know he wasn’t the mad one, it was the German people taking them and killing them by the thousands. His tears stained the heart of Elie as he would remember and experience the …show more content…
They went through things almost indescribable and the feelings and images from that time will forever be with them. No matter how life has gotten better a part of all survivors hearts will have a tear in them. A tear that is not fixable, just like the thousands and thousands of lives that were lost can not be brought back. Humans can’t rewind time to change what has happened in the past, but from what has been learned in books like Elie Wiesel’s, people can learn from it and make for a better