Transcript File

Night
by Elie Wiesel
An introduction to
Judaism, the Holocaust,
and World War II.
What is the subject matter of this
sculpture? What does it look like? What
emotions do you feel when you look at it?
Jewish Terminology
• Cabbala: the Jewish mystical tradition
• Hasidic: a branch of Orthodox Judaism
that maintains a lifestyle separate from
the non-Jewish world
• Kaddish: A prayer associated with
mourning practices (when people die)
• Rosh Hashanah: The new year for the
purpose of the calendar
Jewish Terminology cont.
• Sodom: Wicked Biblical city that suffered
God’s wrath
• Synagogue: A Jewish house of worship
• Torah: The entire body of Jewish teachings
• Yom Kippur: A day set aside for fasting,
depriving oneself of pleasures, and
repenting from sins
• Zohar: The primary written work in the
mystical tradition of the Cabbala.
Nazi Terminology
• Anti-Semitism: Systematic prejudice against Jews
• Aryan: In the Nazi ideology, the pure, the superior
Germanic race
• Death’s Head: Nazi skull symbol worn on SS uniforms
• Fascist: One who supports a political movement
that advocates a nationalist dictatorship
• Gestapo: The German internal security police—
secret police
• SS: An elite quasi-military unit of the Nazi party that
served as Hitler's personal guard and as a special
security force in Germany and the occupied
countries.
Holocaust Terminology
• Ghetto: Was a section of the city
where all Jews from the surrounding
areas were forced to reside. They were
surrounded by barbed wire so that
people were prevented from entering
or leaving. Eventually all ghettos were
emptied as the Jews were deported to
death camps.
Holocaust Terminology
• Concentration Camp: A camp
established by the Nazis for the
imprisonment of all “enemies” of their
regime
• Death Camp: A concentration camp
which its distinct purpose was the
extermination of its inmates
• Crematory: The place that contained
ovens, furnaces, and chimneys, where
victims were burned—alive or dead.
A Concentration Camp in Germany
Camps in Night
• Auschwitz Concentration
Camp (contained three
camps)
• Birkenau-an extermination
camp
• Buna-a labor camp
• Gleiwitz-a sub camp of
Auschwitz
These are the camps that
our narrator experiences
Inside the Barracks
Gas Chambers
Almost all of the deportees
who arrived at the camps
were sent immediately to
death in the gas chambers
(with the exception of very
small numbers chosen for
special work teams known as
Sonderkommandos). The
largest killing center was
Auschwitz-Birkenau, which by
spring 1943 had four gas
chambers (using Zyklon B
poison gas) in operation. At
the height of the
deportations, up to 6,000 Jews
were gassed each day at
Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland.
Over a million Jews and tens
of thousands of Roma, Poles,
and Soviet prisoners of war
were killed there by
November 1944.
Crematorium
A watch
tower,
trench,
fence, and
foundation
barracks.
Work Makes One Free
Elie Wiesel
• Born September 30, 1926 in Sighet, a small
town in Transylvania that was then part of
Romania but is now part of Hungary.
• Was distinguished as a young boy as having
been educated in the study of traditional Jewish
texts.
• He and his family were taken from their home
and moved to Auschwitz.
• After being liberated he took a ten-year vow of
silence.
• He then published Night which was originally
800 pages and much more raw, angry, and
pessimistic.
• It is now one of the most honored memoirs.
• The book is a cross between a memoir,
fiction novel, and autobiography.
• Not everything that happens in the
book happened to Elie.
• He picked unimportant details to help
separate himself from the narrator.
• As you can imagine, it would have
been hard to write a solely truthful,
personal account.
• Wiesel wanted an emotional as well as
an historical account of the Holocaust.