he was forced
Franek was a fellow inmate at the concentration camp in the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel. He was known for his manipulative and selfish behavior, especially towards Elie's father. Franek forced Elie to give up his gold tooth in exchange for not beating his father.
Franek wanted Elie's gold tooth in exchange for easier work and better treatment in the concentration camp. Franek used various tactics to pressure and manipulate Elie into giving up his tooth, eventually resorting to violence when Elie refused.
Franek wanted Elie's gold tooth in the book Night as a symbolic act of dehumanization and power over Elie. By forcefully taking away Elie's tooth, Franek aimed to strip him of his dignity and identity, reducing him to a mere object.
his tooth
Because Elie would not give him his gold tooth/crown.
because the germans wanted to tkae valuable things from them
In "Night" by Elie Wiesel, a dentist uses a pair of pliers to remove Elie's gold tooth. The procedure is performed under duress, as Elie is forced to part with it for fear of punishment. The extraction symbolizes the dehumanization and loss of identity experienced by the prisoners in the concentration camps.
Elie lied about being sick and said he could have surgery to take out the tooth later, which bought him time to avoid having it forcibly removed by the Nazis.
he give Elie a knife and a spoon
Elie Wiesel's gold tooth was extracted by a camp dentist in Auschwitz. It was taken from him against his will as part of the dehumanizing and brutal treatment that he experienced during the Holocaust.
he was forced
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.