Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Beaten Like Dogs

Beaten identical Dogs ? They went by, f tout ensembleen, dragging their packs, dragging their lives, deserting their childhood, cringing like crush dogs. This reiterate stated in the book the wickedness written by Elie Wiesel. This mention simply sums up the book in a few words. For me it shows the awful misery endured by the Jewish peck. This quote actually has a deep impact on me. It makes me assoil how lucky I am, to live in a country where there is a freedom to institutionalise whatever religion you want to be a part of.It makes me feel so bad for all the torture that the Jews suffered. When I think about the gun for hire chambers, the starvation, and the abuse, I put myself in the position of a Jewish person. If my family was t sr. we were all going to shower, and finally be clean, and we were actually world executed. It makes me sick to my stomach. The disgust the images from this quote bring to me, I will never forget. When I juxtapose my spiritedness with an 18 y ear old Jewish boys life in 1945 I realize the suffrage that they went through. I take away to have a job, which I get paying(a) for.While a Jewish boy at this term would be forced to do hard fag for no pay and if they refuse they would be brutally murdered. I eat anyday three meals a day but this boy however gets miniscule to no food. Could I live like this? hapless everyday surviving physical and mental torture. I really dont think I could, all of the people, good innocent people being persecuted for their religion I have realized were stronger therefore the over compensating Nazis who got there luxuriously from literally breaking down these good people.This quote has changed the way I look at my life and the freedom and choices I get to make every day. Such as school, clothing, sports, and my job. Also the quote has changed my adopt on abusive parents. Ive always cognize this is a bad thing, but the quote makes me experience how an abused child could feel on the insi de. In my opinion Wiesel named the book Night because the Jewish people in the death camps felt like they were detain in the darkness, and would never see the light of day again.

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