A kid heard sounds coming from a small adjoining room and he saw idek and a young polish girl half naked
Idek was caught with the Polish girl in the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel because someone reported them to the SS for having a secret relationship. They were both publicly punished and the girl was later hanged.
Idek was a kapo, a concentration camp inmate assigned to supervise other prisoners, in the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel. He was known for his violent and unpredictable behavior towards the prisoners, often subjecting them to brutal beatings for no reason. Idek symbolized the dehumanization and arbitrary cruelty that pervaded the camp environment.
Elie Wiesel is whipped in the book "Night" as a punishment for witnessing Idek, a Kapo, having a relationship with a Polish girl. This incident shows the cruelty and brutality within the concentration camp where prisoners faced arbitrary and violent punishments.
The tradesman turned policeman in the book "Night" is Idek, who was a former locksmith before becoming a foreman at the Buna warehouse where Elie Wiesel was imprisoned. Idek's erratic behavior and violent outbursts towards the prisoners display the dehumanizing effect of the concentration camp on both the guards and inmates.
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.
Because Elie would not give him his gold tooth/crown.
Idek was the Kapo who beat Elie Wiesel in the warehouse in the book Night. Idel was known for his violent outbursts and unpredictable behavior towards the prisoners.
Idek beats Elie's father in the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel as an act of cruelty and abuse of power. Idek, who is a Kapo in the concentration camp, frequently lashes out at prisoners to assert his authority and relieve his own frustrations. The violence illustrates the dehumanizing conditions and brutal treatment that prisoners faced in the camp.
That night he got caught
Imperium - Polish book - was created in 1993.
In Elie Wiesel's book "Night," the Polish prisoner in charge of the block advised Elie to lie about his age and occupation to avoid selection for death in the concentration camp. He also warned Elie about the importance of staying strong and holding onto hope in order to survive the horrors they were facing.
Book = Książka.
Elie was mad at his father after witnessing him being beaten because he felt anger and guilt for not intervening or defending him. He was also angry at his father for not being able to protect himself or stand up to the abuse. Elie's anger towards Idek may have been overshadowed by his conflicted emotions towards his father in that moment.