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The night chapter 1. why does elie wiesel tell this story?
The night chapter 1. why does elie wiesel tell this story?








the night chapter 1. why does elie wiesel tell this story? the night chapter 1. why does elie wiesel tell this story? the night chapter 1. why does elie wiesel tell this story?

Another prisoner tells them they would have been better off hanging themselves than to come here.Age can mean the difference between life and death. On hearing that Eliezer is 15 and his father is 50, the prisoner tells them they should be 18 and 40. A kind prisoner comes up to Eliezer and his father, asking them their ages.Already, some Jews are being beaten and shot.Eliezer’s one thought is not to lose his father.Although he does not know it at the moment, this is the last time Eliezer will ever see his mother and youngest sister, Tzipora. Men are sent to the left, women to the right.The Jews must leave all of their cherished possessions-and optimistic illusions-in the cattle car as they move forward to be admitted to the concentration camp.










The night chapter 1. why does elie wiesel tell this story?