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Essay / Elie Wiesel's Novel Night - 1162
In 1944, the Nazi regime created a genocidal plan to eliminate believers in Judaism, as well as others, who were not worthy of the image perfect. Millions of people were killed by gas chambers, disease and starvation. While experiencing the terrors of the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel wrote his book called Night which was influenced by his own experiences. It was a winning book and he focused the book on his experience in the ghetto. and concentration camps. The Night is influenced by his faith in Judaism, his hardships in concentration camps, and the mental and physical pain he endured during the Holocaust. » In 1944, the Nazis forced Jewish believers to leave the countries of Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania, to be transferred to the new labor and extermination camps located in Poland (The Biography Channel). “If people were not taken to concentration camps, they quickly moved to non-Nazi countries. the 136,000 Jews displaced from Europe (Holocaust in the United States).” "Of the nine million Jews who originally resided in Europe before the Holocaust, about two-thirds of them were killed (Wikipedia Contributor)" "The Nazi regime murdered approximately 6 million Jews in total (Holocaust in the United States). »So many people have lost their lives, innocent men, women and children, for many reasons. German authorities not only targeted Jews, they also killed other groups because of their racial identity. At least 200,000 mentally or physically disabled patients, mainly Germans, living in institutes were murdered under the euthanasia program. (Holocaust in the United States). ......m and push to survive. The mental and physical pain he felt from losing his family and friends and becoming so helpless in the face of it all. This was the influence of the book on his life. His faith in Judaism, his hardships in concentration camps, and the mental and physical pain he endured during the Holocaust. Works Cited “Eliezer Wiesel”. 2014. Biography Channel website. Internet. March 26, 2014. Mandell, Sherri Lederman. “Wiesel, Elie.” Bloom's literature. Facts about File, Inc. Web. March 26. 2014. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, . No. Internet. March 27, 2014. Werlock, Abby HP, ed. “Wiesel, Elie.” Bloom's literature. Facts about File, Inc. Web. March 26, 2014. Wiesel, Elie,Nuit. Union Square: Hill and Wang. 2006.Print. Wikipedia contributors. “The Holocaust.” Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, April 1, 2014. Web. April 3. 2014.