I do believe it was a knife and a spoon because those are the objects he gave Elie when he though he was going to die. That had to be all he had left.
Elie Wiesel's father held onto his spoon and his knife in the camp as symbols of survival and hope. The spoon was for sustenance, while the knife provided protection and a sense of control in their dire circumstances.
they were separated in the concentration camps, and he only had his father, he then found out that his mother and sister were cremated alive in the ovens. in 1944 Elie's father died from starvation.
It is about their time in the Nazi concentration camp. His father died, Elie survived.
Elie's father helped him after he suffered one of Idek's bouts of madness in the camp. His father was a source of strength and support for Elie during their time in the concentration camp.
Elie and his father must make a decision whether to go on the death march or stay in the infirmary at the camp. Elie decides that the camp will probably be bombed by the Nazis after it's evacuation and the sick peopel in the infirmary will be killed. He believes this because the Nazis have no use for sick people. Elie and his father go on the death march, which proves to be a bad choice because two days after the camp was evacuated and Elie and his father went on the march, people in the infirmary were freed. Had Elie and his father stayed in the infirmary, they would have been freed from the reign of the Nazis and his father would have survived the Holocaust.
about three weeks
The guards took Elie Wiesel's father to the crematorium at Auschwitz concentration camp. They were separated during a selection process, and Elie later found out that his father had been sent to be killed.
doesnt want his father to get killed for not marching righ
According to Elie's book Night, his father died in Buchenwald. Just before the camp was liberated by the American Army. Chlomo (also spelled Shlomo), Elie's father was diagnosed with dysentery (disease of the intestines) and sent to the crematory where he was killed.
Elie's family was separated upon reaching the camp. Elie was separated from his mother and sister, who were sent to the gas chambers. His father was with him in the camp and they faced harsh conditions and brutality together.
In the book "Night", Elie and his father are transferred to the Buna camp, a subcamp of Auschwitz, where they are forced to perform hard labor and endure harsh conditions.
Night is a book by Elie Weisel about his experience with his father in a Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz and Buchenwalt. Elie wants to study and learn Caballa.
Elie and his father have to decide whether to stay in the concentration camp or take their chances in the death march. They ultimately decide to evacuate with the rest of the camp during the death march rather than be left behind.