I believe she did, along with her son. Probably shot by German Soldiers because they didn't leave the train car.
Madame Schacter is a passenger who screams that she sees a fireever day. ( its in chapter 2)
the fire
The nightmares of Madame Schachter's from the book "Night" foreshadowed the horrors waiting for the Jews in concentration camps. The book was written by Elie Wiesel based on his experiences in the concentration camps during the Holocaust until World War II.
mrs Schachter
There is no character named Madame Khan in the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel. The book is Wiesel's memoir about his experiences during the Holocaust as a teenager in Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps.
Because she is food deprived, emotionally scarred, and completely bonkers. She was given the gift of prophecy. She could see what was up ahead.
Madame Schacter is a character of the book "Night", written by Elie Wiesel. On the train to Auschwitz, Elie meets Madame Schacter who has having visions of fire. She constantly warns the people on the train of the flames that awaits them. Her words prove be true as Elie steps off the train and witnesses the flames of the crematorium and the smell of burning flesh...
The main characters are Karin Levi, Marc Levi, an Madame Zetain.
The book Scream Street by Tommy Donbavand has 128 pages.
Madame Hoskier has written: 'Thoughts, memories and meditations of Madame Hoskier' -- subject(s): Accessible book
The book titled Madame Bovary is 384 pages long. This book was written by Gustave Flaubert and it was his first novel.
Madame Sachachter was a passenger on the train on the way to Auschwitz concentration camp. The first night on the train she started screaming that she saw fire and a giant furnace outside of the only window on the train. The people looked to see if she was really seeing the fire. Nothing was there, and people pitied her, saying she had gone mad. Her young son was the only one who was there to comfort her. Every night she would continue to scream about the fire. It got to the point where men would hit her to keep her quiet. The way she talks about the fire and the furnace is almost as if she can see into the future. She managed to predict the fate of many Jews even though some found her mad.