# Auschwitz II, where he and his father were selected for work at Auschwitz III (Monowitz, sometimes also called Buna). # Buchenwald, where his father died.
Elie lost strenght because that was his most valuable possession (other than his father) at the camp since everything was taken away from him.
When Elie and his family first arrived at the concentration camp, the men were told to line up in one line and the women in the other. The women were taken somewhere else at the camp, and the men went to an area of the camp near the crematorium. There, the went through selection and the boys too young to work and the men too old to work were taken to the crematorium, and well, i think you know what happened to them. The survivors of the selection were then taken to barracks where inmates tattooed numbers on the arms of the new arrivals. This is how the inmates were kept track of. If you would like to learn more, read the book Night by Elie Wiesel.-G.A.
In the book "Night," Elie Wiesel's gold crown was taken out with a rusty spoon by a dentist in the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Elie Wiesel's shoes were not taken away at Buna because he managed to hide them and keep them with him. This helped him to avoid having to walk barefoot and endure the harsh conditions in the camp.
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.
Buchenwald was a concentration camp.
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.
his tooth
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.
Elie was separated from his mother and sisters during the selection process at Auschwitz concentration camp. They were sent to the gas chambers, while Elie and his father were deemed fit for labor. Elie's grandmother was separated from him upon arrival at the camp and sent to the gas chambers.
Idek.
Elie Wiesel