His gold crown
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.
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 torments Elie's father to assert his power and dominance over him. He takes advantage of the vulnerability of Elie's father in order to exert control and instill fear in him. Additionally, Franek's actions serve to break down Elie's father's spirit and sense of dignity in the dehumanizing environment of the concentration camp.
Franek is Eliezer's foreman at Buna. Franek notices Eliezer's gold tooth and gets a dentist in the camp to pry it out with a rusty spoon.
Yes, Elie gave up his gold crown to Franek in exchange for sparing his father from further torment. This act shows Elie's sacrifice and willingness to protect his father during their time in the concentration camps.
He is sent to the dentist but tells him that he is ill, for the first two visits, so that he does not have his gold crown removed. The dentist is later arrested and he keeps his crown until it is later confiscated for nothing in return.
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 got rescued when the Americans got everyone that was still alive out of the camps
because the germans wanted to tkae valuable things from them
Ján Franek was born in 1960.
Friedrich Franek was born on 1891-07-16.
Friedrich Franek died on 1976-04-08.