The guards ordered the prisoners to go to an assembly in which prisoners told them that the germans would kill them so they should go back to their baracks
The room where the guards take the prisoners in "1984" is Room 101. This room is where prisoners face their worst fears and phobias in order to break their spirit and loyalty to any opposition to the Party.
Bread
The prisoners in the book Night finally stopped their march at the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany.
The prisoners traveled from Buna to Gleiwitz by marching in a forced death march. They were made to walk long distances in harsh conditions with minimal food, water, and rest. Many prisoners did not survive the journey due to exhaustion, sickness, or being shot by guards.
The tradesman turned policeman in the book "Night" is Idek, who was a former locksmith before becoming a foreman at the Buna warehouse where Elie Wiesel was imprisoned. Idek's erratic behavior and violent outbursts towards the prisoners display the dehumanizing effect of the concentration camp on both the guards and inmates.
In the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, the prisoners were not necessarily disinfected in the traditional sense. They were subjected to various dehumanizing processes upon entering the concentration camps, such as head shaving and showering, but these actions were more about degrading and controlling the prisoners than about actual sanitation.
In the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, the dentist examined prisoners' mouths for gold teeth, which were often forcibly removed without anesthesia. This extraction of gold teeth was a form of exploitation and dehumanization inflicted upon the prisoners in the concentration camps.
In the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, Pipel is a young Jewish boy who was hanged by the Nazi guards for aiding in an act of sabotage. Despite his young age, Pipel's execution serves as a powerful example of the dehumanization and brutality faced by Jewish prisoners during the Holocaust.
they were all lost in agony
In the book, Night, Rabbi Eliahou is one of the prisoners. He is portrayed as being devout in his faith, and having a son who, unfortunately, abandons him.
In the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, many of the Jewish prisoners in the concentration camp at Sighet were in a state of shock and disbelief about the atrocities they were facing. The Nazis instilled fear and control, making escape attempts dangerous and often futile. Additionally, the prisoners were malnourished, weak, and lacked resources to plan and execute a successful escape.
By the Americans ____ Actually, there was a prisoners revolt at Buchenwald.