The Holocaust is Dark

One Man's Religious Journey

By Bertributor, published Oct 02, 2007
Published Content: 38  Total Views: 3,469  Favorited By: 1 CPs
Rating: 4.0 of 5
Night's Elie Wiesel is a young boy raised in the devout Hasidic tradition. However, he has too much "chutzpah" to follow his father's advice to passively practice Hasidism alone. As his life is torn by the rising crescendo of the Holocaust, Elie experiments with spirituality and concepts that change his religious views as well as his perceptions of God. While his life tumbles into disarray, his feelings toward God and his religion change drastically.

Elie's first guide on his path to religious enlightenment is Moshe the Beadle. Moshe is learned in Jewish mysticism (cabala) and he is considered an outcast by Elie's community. In contrast, Elie is entrenched in a traditional community based on order. Because Elie is rebellious and curious about why his father forbid him to study the cabala, he forges a friendship with Moshe, learning the cabala from him. Moshe instructs Elie to study the many facets of God through asking provocative questions. This is Elie's first step toward becoming part of the fringe elements of Judaism.

As the Holocaust envelops Elie, his all-trusting feelings toward God waver. He finds a new role model: the biblical character Job. He declares his thoughts succinctly, "...But I had ceased to pray. How I sympathized with Job! I did not deny God's existence but I doubted his absolute justice." (34). The similarities between Job and Elie are uncanny, however the one colossal difference becomes glaringly apparent to Elie: he discovers that unlike Job he is not alone in his hellish existence. Given that a plethora of Jews are being punished, he concludes that to believe in God is to accept that God is punishing the Jewish people as a race.

Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Most Commented On