1928
September 30: Elie Wiesel is born in Transylvania, Romania.
1938
November 9-10: Nazis carry out Kristallnacht, which destroys 7500 Jewish-owned stores and synagogues. Jewish children are banned from German schools. Many Jews emigrate.
1941
Late December: Elie Wiesel meets Moshe the Beadle.
1942
Late in the year: Moshe the Beadle escapes Gestapo slaughter to warn the Jews in Sighet.
1944
April: Nazis arrest Jewish leaders and close synagogues in Transylvania. Jews are quarantined. Nazis confiscate valuables and force transylvainian Jews to wear the yellow Star of David and ban them from restaurants, cafes, and public transportation.
May 16: All Sighet Jews are forced from their homes and told to line up in the street at 8 A.M. At 1 P.M., the first group departs by train.
Several days later: Elie's family marches to the "little ghetto."
A few days later: The Wiesels join the last group of deportees aboard a railway cattle car.
Late May: The convoy reaches Birkenau, and Elie and Chlomo spend their first night in camp. Summer Guards send Elie and Chlomo to Auschwitz. There, they meet Stein of Antwerp. Elie and Chlomo march to Buna. Elie is tattooed A-7713 on his left arm.
1945
January: Elie undergoes surgery in the Auschwitz infirmary. Chlomo and Elie run with evacuees to Gleiwitz, where they and others board open cattle cars for a ten-day ride to Buchenwald in central Germany.
January 18: The red army liberates Auschwitz
Late January: Chlomo Wiesel dies in a bunk at Buchenwald.
April: Elie falls ill with food poisoning. Elie is liberated with the arrival of U.S. troops.
"Night" by Elie Wiesel is a memoir that recounts the author's experiences in concentration camps during the Holocaust. The timeline of the book spans from 1941, when Wiesel is deported to a concentration camp, to 1945, when he is liberated from Buchenwald. It captures the horrors of the Holocaust and Wiesel's struggle for survival during this period.
love ya
1940's
The person who beats Elie in front of the French girl, in Night by Elie Wiesel, is Idek.
Night was written by Elie Wiesel.
The citation for the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel in MLA format would include the author's name, book title, publication year, publisher, and publication format. For example: Wiesel, Elie. Night. Hill and Wang, 2006.
Night
Elie Wiesel's Night is a memoir recounting his experiences during the Holocaust as a teenager. The events in the book span from 1941, when the Wiesel family is deported to Auschwitz, to 1945, when Elie is liberated from Buchenwald concentration camp. Throughout this time, Elie faces unimaginable suffering and loss, but also showcases resilience and courage in the face of immense adversity.
At the beginning of the excerpt in "Night" by Elie Wiesel, Wiesel is in a train car with other Jews being transported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Elie Wiesel was a professor of humanities at Boston University.
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A. The statement that Elie Wiesel wrote a poem called "So Sweet Night" is false. Elie Wiesel did write the book "Night," which is his most famous work, and he won numerous awards for his writing. It is also true that "Night" was originally written in Yiddish.
In "Night" by Elie Wiesel, the guard who beat him is referred to simply as the "gloomy-faced" officer. No specific name is given in the book.
Elie Wiesel was a Holocaust survivor, author, and Nobel laureate known for his memoir "Night." Eliezer is a biblical name that Elie Wiesel shares; Eliezer is also the protagonist's name in Wiesel's memoir "Night."