Buchenwald.
Hilda.
Eliezer experiences a range of emotions when he witnesses his father's decline and eventual death in the concentration camp. He struggles with conflicting emotions of guilt, grief, anger, and helplessness. Despite the immense suffering, he also feels a sense of relief when his father is finally at peace.
During Eliezer's father's final illness in the book Night, there was a role reversal where Eliezer had to take care of his father instead of the other way around. Eliezer became more like a caretaker, providing his father with food, water, and encouragement, which was a stark contrast to their roles at the beginning of their time in the concentration camps.
He tells his father while heading to the crematoria "If that is true, then I don't want to wait. I'll run into the electrified barbed wire. That would be easier than a slow death in the flames." Eliezar doesn't want to die from the flames so he plans to run into the electrified barbed wire because it is a quicker and less painful death.
His father dies when they are in Glewitz.
1497 vasco da gamas father die
He claimed he had not lost faith in Hitler.
He remains loyal to his father if you mean he doesn't leave him for death. When Elie's father gets sick, Elie is by his side pretty much at all times. At first he helps him, but later on when his father is asking for water, (which was bad for him) Elie accepts the fact that his father is dying. He starts to appease his father which makes it worse. Ultimately in the end, Elie's father dies from the sickness.
Her father is still alive
Father Hendricks died in 1907.
Father Yod died in 1975.
by dieing