Teen Ink: Teen Magazine, Poetry, Blogs, College, Music, Movie & Book Reviews, Fiction
Subscribe to our magazine
Submit Work
 
Advanced Search
Article title:
Words within article:
Section of website:
Article appears on:
Author's first name:
Author's last initial:
Author's city:
Author's state:
Author's country:
    
Subscribe
Submit Work
Teen Ink RAW
Join Teen Ink
About Us
Teen Ink Store
Tell A Friend
Contests
beRED on AOL
Bulletin Board
Partners
Resources
Celebrity
Interviews
Advertise
Subscribing
Schools
Link to Us
Contact Us







« Previous Article Poetry Index Next Article »

Night

Rate this article:

Send your work

Email a Friend

Bulletin Board

Teen Ink Blogs



By Jeremy C., ,

   Elie Wiesel's horrifying autobiographical book, Night, is a portrait of his experiences in Nazi concentration camps during the holocaust. The book was written by Wiesel with the primary intent to give readers a basic understanding of some of the horrible massacres that occurred during World War II.

He wants his readers not to be "grossed out," but instead to learn about the dangers of not cracking down on hatred and prejudice. By reminding people of the dangers of unfair treatment of people simply because of their race, Wiesel hopes only to help future generations of susceptible people remember that along with capabilities to do good deeds, humankind has an extremely dangerous capacity for performing evil deeds. The holocaust must be forever remembered not only by its victims, but by everyone in society, and at the point in time that books like Night are forgotten, then society may be apt to repeat similar mistakes.

Wiesel survived Auschwitz, Buna and Buchenwald (concentration camps where millions were slaughtered) and Night vividly relates the emotions of horror, despair, and desperate hope that marked Wiesel's passionate struggle to survive. Night is not a book for pleasurable reading, but it is most definitely vital literature. n






« Previous Article Index Next Article »