Yes he does die.
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.
Elie Wiesel's father did not die during the death march. He died after the death march, in Buchenwald. He died from dysentery (also, starvation and exhaustion). In Night, Elie said that his father was suffering from dysentery, and had kept asking for water, when one of the guards hit him over the head with a truncheon, and by morning he was dead.
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.
He teaches him to march in step. You all should read the book it's fantastic though sad and depressing at times but what related to the Holocaust is not :(
no
Elie and his father are recognized by a fellow prisoner named Juliek in Auschwitz, who knew Elie from their hometown of Sighet.
Elie is driven by a strong will to survive and a desire to reunite with his father. Additionally, his determination is bolstered by his faith in God and the hope that liberation is possible. These factors help him endure the hardships of the march and keep him from giving up.
Elie Wisel father's name Chlomo or Shlomo Wiesel
He was a Jew.
At the concentration camps, Elie and his father support each other through their ordeal, offering each other comfort and companionship. Elie's father becomes his reason for survival, motivating Elie to keep fighting to stay alive and protect his father. Elie later feels guilt and relief after his father's death, as he is no longer burdened with the responsibility of caring for him in such harsh conditions.
he was killed whie elie lived
Elie Wiesel and His Father in the Book 'Night'Our users give their impressions:Elie and his father were especially close at the death camps. They were inseparable, really. They loved each other and would not let that fade and be separated. They would die for one another if it was necessary. His father died. Elie was a witness to it. He never forgave himself for letting the SS man beat his father to death since his father was ill and cried for water to feel better.Elie's relationship with his father is very close. However, the relationship between Elie and his father, Chlomo, changes throughout the novel. At the beginning of the novel, Elie and his father have a fairly close relationship, apart from his father's commitments to the community (not having time for his kin (family). Even in saying that Elie loved and respected his father just as everyone in the community did. But further on in the novel, they drift further and further apart. At some stage, Elie starts to feel that his father is a burden. And at the end Elie has no tears to cry when his father finally dies.