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A gypsy Kapo.
Eliezer did not want his father to rest because he saw the dead bodies laying all around when they tried to rest and died. so if his father would have rested, chances are he would have died.
Eighteen and forty.
Their relative from Antwerp, named Stein. -Tori Lynn.(:
Marco Polo wasn't sponsored by any country. His father was a rich merchant from Venice, Italy and Marco, his father, and uncle paid their own way to China. His father had all ready been there once so when they arrived they were welcomed. Marco was 17 when he arrived with his father and stayed there many years.
Shlomo was eliezer's father
The gypsy strikes Eliezer's father because he asked where the toilets were.
Eliezer's father dies at the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany.
He didn't help and just watched as his father was beaten. And, he never responded to his fathers dying calls (his father kept saying 'Eliezer' and Eliezer never responded out of fear of being beaten).
Barrack Obama
Eliezer gave his father marching lessons in the concentration camp to help him avoid being chosen for selection and to keep him moving to avoid being killed. It was a way to keep his father strong and motivated to survive the harsh conditions of the camp.
A gypsy Kapo.
He was unconscious.
eliezer sneaks over to the left side and slips his father back over to the right side while there was a lot of confusion.
Obama has the same name as his father. He was a junior until his father died.
During Eliezer's father's final illness in the book Night, there was a role reversal where Eliezer had to take care of his father instead of the other way around. Eliezer became more like a caretaker, providing his father with food, water, and encouragement, which was a stark contrast to their roles at the beginning of their time in the concentration camps.
Eliezer recited the Kaddish in spite of himself as a way to honor his father and as a form of rebellion against the dehumanization he was experiencing in the concentration camp. It was a way for him to hold onto his identity and spirituality amidst the horrors of the Holocaust.