The Jews of Sighet protest the expulsion of the foreign born Jews is false. This information is from the novel 'Night' by Elie Wiesel.
No, they just say what can you expect, it is wartime.
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.
Moishe the Beadle was deported from Sighet because he was a foreign Jew and subjected to the anti-Semitic policies of the Hungarian authorities during World War II. He was taken away with other foreign Jews to be forced into labor camps.
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.
Moishe was deported from Sighet because he was a foreign Jew and was seen as a threat by the Hungarian police during World War II. He was taken away with other foreigners and left to die in the forest, but managed to escape and return to warn the Jews of Sighet about the impending danger.
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.
As far as I'm aware, nobody.
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 german officers enter in the jews houses and lives with them.
The deportation of the foreign Jews and the warnings by Moshe the Beadle. The community didn't believe they were in danger because they didn't want believe it and doubted anything would happen to them. It was a case of blind optimism. Soon, the Sighet Jews were sent to the ghettos and stripped of their rights gradually, before they're sent to the concentration camps. The community didn't see it coming because of their foolish optimism.
sighet
They were transferred by the Hungarian army to the Germans.