Elie Wiesel's rebellion against God is symbolized by his struggle to maintain his faith in the face of human suffering during the Holocaust. Through his memoir "Night," he expresses his anger and questioning of God's presence and justice in the midst of the atrocities he witnessed. Ultimately, Elie's rebellion can be seen in his refusal to accept a benevolent God in a world filled with such horrific cruelty.
goth isn't a religion its a trend but most goths believe in the satanic religion which is the rebelion against any other god but Satan
Elie's response towards is that he doubts God's strengths and begins to down play his beliefs in God....
by not fasting on Yom Kippur, the day of fasting. because there was two reasons why he did not fast: one reason was becuse his father and the secon reason was because he himself was rebelling against God.
Elie thinks god cannot help
as he watches the hangings, because the boy that was hung did not die at first, and he died slowly and painfully. here someone in the crowed asks, "where is God?" and Elie answers in his head,"God is dead." ^ actually you idiot, Elie hears a voice from within him say, "Where He is? This is where - hanging from this gallows..."
Elie Wiesel looses his father, mother, sisters, and childhood.
Elie Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor and writer, struggled with questions about the existence of God after his experiences in concentration camps. His writings suggest a complex and evolving relationship with God rather than a belief in God's literal death.
Elie Wiesel refers to himself as God's "accuser." He feels conflicted about his faith and questions why God allows such suffering to occur during the Holocaust. This title highlights his struggle to reconcile his belief in a merciful God with the horrors he witnesses.
Elie Wiesel does not share Akiba Drumer's belief that the suffering of the Jews is a sign of love from God. Elie struggles with his faith throughout the novel and eventually questions the existence and justice of God in the face of such extreme suffering and cruelty.
Desert his father for his own self-interest
A conflict is Elie's struggle with abandoning his dad, because he is fighting with his need for self-preservation and his love for his father Another conflict is Elie's struggle with his faith in God.
Elie chose not to fast on Yom Kippur while he was in the concentration camp because he felt that he was living in an environment where every man was fighting for himself, and divine justice seemed absent in such a place. He had lost his faith and saw fasting as an act of rebellion against a God who had allowed such atrocities to occur.