The only problem is that people don't believe it.
Moshe suddenly leaves Sighet because he escapes a massacre carried out by the Gestapo against foreign Jews, who were living in Hungary without Hungarian citizenship. Moshe witnesses the horrors of the massacre and barely escapes with his life, prompting him to return to Sighet to warn the other Jews of the impending danger.
Moshe the Beadle, a character in Night, returns to Sighet to warn the Jews of the impending danger and atrocities that lie ahead. However, his warnings are dismissed as unbelievable by the Jews in the community.
Moshe the Beadle was Eliezer's teacher of Jewish mysticism, Moshe is a poor Jew who lives in Sighet. He is deported before the rest of the Sighet Jews but escapes and returns to tell the town what the Nazis are doing to the Jews. Tragically, the community takes Moshe for a lunatic.
playing dead, like moshe the beadle
True. The Jews of Sighet were eager to listen to Moshe's miraculous experiences because he had witnessed the horrors of the Holocaust firsthand and was able to provide them with valuable information and insights.
Moshe the beadle experienced being deported along with other Jews from Sighet to the Galician forest by the Nazis. He escaped and returned to warn the Jews of the atrocities he witnessed, but was not believed.
True. Moshe the Beadle does attempt to warn the Jews of Sighet about the impending danger they will face during the Holocaust. However, the Jews do not take his warnings seriously and dismiss him as crazy.
The Jews of Sighet are first taken by the Germans to local ghettos after their arrival.
Moshe the Beadle was Eliezer's teacher of Jewish mysticism, Moshe is a poor Jew who lives in Sighet. He is deported before the rest of the Sighet Jews but escapes and returns to tell the town what the Nazis are doing to the Jews. Tragically, the community takes Moshe for a lunatic.
at first they think of him as a peron that bothers no one they didn't mind him. When he comes back from the forest from which he escapes they treat him unkindly. They think that he is trying to get attention and pity when he tells the story. No one would listen to him.
The Jews of Sighet were initially skeptical and dismissive of Moshe's miraculous escape from the Nazis. Many considered his warnings about the impending danger to be alarmist or delusional, believing that such atrocities could not happen to them. This disbelief stemmed from their comfortable lives and the assumption that they would be safe in their community. As a result, they largely ignored his pleas for caution and preparation.
because they were scared of also getting killed like they killed the other jews that had takesn some of the jews out of sighet