Sunday, June 2, 2019
Night :: essays research papers
Night Religion has always explained the unknown in knowable terms. It has created symbols for that which could not be known. This symbolic representation is so deeply imbedded in our minds, cultures, and cosmology that it is rarely questioned from inside the religious paradigms. From outside that paradigm, the religious imagery loses its impact, its subliminal meaning. Religion functions to relieve the anxiety of the tyrannical fact for each of us that we will die, that our family will die, that our friends will die. Religion promises us that although we may die, we will continue. And, if we believe, then our afterlife will be glorious. church property offers another perspective to this man-made solution. The spiritualistic belief is that of love for the fellow man instead of god hospitals instead of churches deeds done rather than prayers said. Spirituality, although bordering on atheism, contriveks to make and love, to find an ethical way of life rather than turning to a high er being for the easy way out. In "Night" by Elie Wiesel we see death of religion in a child because of absolute evil and consequently, the embrace of spirituality. Separated from man made institutions, the core of religion and spirituality must(prenominal) be preserved, if one is to survive in the midst of horror.     The Judaic religion was a key motivation to the citizens of Sighet. To Jews religion is not only a regularity to achieve immortality, but a way of life that must be holistically embraced. This all-consuming religion demands total obedience and is a key motivation in the Jewish deportation and personal surrender to Germany . Analyzing history, one sees the pattern of a Jewish nomad lifestyle ,so deep is their corporate trust, and moving on. "Night" is the first episode where this blind faith could not save them. Spawning from this failure of God is the genocide of millions at the hands of the Nazis. As young Eliezer visits Auschw itz and witnesses this genocide first hand, his blind faith is quickly revoked and in its place remains doubt, question and bitterness.     "Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven time cursed and seven times sealed. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into a wreath of smoke beneath a silent blue sky.
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