the camps were surrounded by barbed wire fences. Plus they had guards on duty during the night as well.
and didn't think anything bad was happening.
There were two ghettos in Sighet (in Night).
In "Night" by Elie Wiesel, Moishe the Beadle and the other foreign Jews in Sighet were initially deported by the Nazis to concentration camps. Moishe managed to escape and returned to Sighet to warn the community about the impending danger, but his warnings were largely ignored. Eventually, in 1944, the Nazis rounded up the remaining Jews of Sighet, including Moishe, and deported them to Auschwitz, where they faced horrific conditions and mass extermination.
Sighet is a town in Transylvania, Romania, where Elie Wiesel, the author of the book "Night," was born. It is also where Wiesel and his family were living when they were deported to Auschwitz during the Holocaust. Sighet is a significant setting in the book, as it represents the loss of innocence and the beginning of Wiesel's harrowing journey through the concentration camps.
Eliezer's family is deported from Sighet on the eve of Pentecost, which falls on May 20, 1944.
sighet
He was from the town of Sighet, Transylvania, then in Hungary, now in Romania.
I took place in the area where this accrues was sighet, Transylvania
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.
the setting is a small town called Sighet in Hungary....in 1941
He lived in Sighet, Transylvania (now part of Romania; during Wiesel's childhood, part of Hungary).
The first edict in the book Night had ordered all foreign Jews to be expelled from Sighet, the town where Elie Wiesel lived with his family.
In the book Night, Moshe the Beadle had successfully survived a massacre and returned to Sighet to warn the other Jews there, but they didn't listen to him.