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The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden

NIGHT
Section 1. In 1941, Eliezer is a twelve-year-old boy living in the Transylvanian town of Sighet. He is the only son in an Orthodox Jewish family that strictly adheres to Jewish tradition and law. Eliezer has two older sisters, Hilda and Ba, and a younger sister named Tzipora. Eliezer studies the Talmud, the Jewish oral law. He also studies the Jewish mystical texts of the Kabbalah and one that goes against his fathers wishes. Eliezer finds a sensitive and challenging teacher in Moshe the Beadle. Moshe is deported by the Hungarians. Despite their momentary anger, the Jews of Sighet soon forget about this anti-Semitic act. After several months, having escaped his captors, Moshe returns and tells how the deportation trains were handed over to the Gestapo at the Polish border. There, he explains, the Jews were forced to dig mass graves for themselves and were killed. The town takes him for a lunatic and refuses to believe his story. In the spring of 1944, the Hungarian government falls into the hands of the Fascists, and the next day the German armies occupy Hungary. Despite the Jews belief that Nazi anti-Semitism would be limited to the capital city, Budapest, the Germans soon move into Sighet. The Jewish community leaders are arrested, Jewish valuables are confiscated, and all Jews are forced to wear yellow stars. Eventually, the Jews are confined to small ghettos, crowded together into narrow streets behind barbed-wire fences. The Nazis then begin to deport the Jews in increments, and Eliezers family is among the last to leave Sighet. They watch as other Jews are crowded into the streets in the hot sun, carrying only what fits in packs on their backs. Eliezers family is first herded into another, smaller ghetto. Their former servant, Martha, visits them and offers to hide them in her village. They decline the offer. A few days later, the Nazis and their henchmen, the Hungarian police, herd the last Jews remaining in Sighet onto cattle cars bound for Auschwitz. Personal This is an atrocity and the pure thought makes me shake to the core with disgust and horror. Section 2. Packed into cattle cars, the Jews are put into nearly unbearable conditions. There is almost no air to breathe, the heat is intense, there is no room to sit, and everyone is hungry and thirsty. In their fear, the Jews begin to lose their sense of public dignity. After days of travel the train arrives at the Czechoslovakian border, and the Jews realize that they are not being relocated. A German officer takes official charge of the train, threatening to shoot any Jew who refuses to give up his or her valuables and to exterminate everybody in the car if anybody escapes. The doors to the car are nailed shut, further preventing escape. Madame Schachter soon cracks under the oppressive treatment to which the Jews are subjected. On the third night, she begins to scream that she sees a fire in the darkness outside the car. They believed that she was crazy like Moshe. Finally, she is tied up and gagged so that she cannot scream. When Madame Schachter breaks out of her bonds and continues to scream about the furnace that awaits them, she is beaten into silence by some of the boys on the train. The next night, Madame Schachter begins her screaming again. The prisoners on the train find out, when the train eventually stops, that they have reached Auschwitz station. They are told that they have arrived at a labor camp where they will be treated well and kept together as families. With nightfall, however, Madame Schachter again wakes everyone with her screams, and again she is beaten into silence. The train moves slowly and at midnight passes into an area enclosed by barbed wire. Through the windows, everybody sees the chimneys of vast furnaces. There is a terrible odor in the air. This concentration camp is Birkenau, the processing center for arrivals at Auschwitz.

The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden


Personal This section makes me wonder why they did not believe the crazy woman, who was not all that crazy, that she sees an awful fire in the distance.

Section 3. At Birkenau selections occurred, during which individuals recognized as weaker or less useful are weeded out to be killed. Eliezer and his father remain together but Eliezers mother and younger sister were separated. Eliezer and his father meet a prisoner, who counsels them to lie about their ages. Eliezer has say that he is eighteen, while his father has to say that he is forty. Another prisoner confronts the new arrivals, angrily asking them why they peacefully let the Nazis bring them to Auschwitz. He explains to them, finally, why they have been brought to Auschwitz. In a central square, Dr. Mengele stands, determining whether new arrivals are fit to work or whether they are to be killed immediately. Taking the prisoners advice, Eliezer lies about his age, telling Mengele he is eighteen. He also says that he is a farmer rather than a student, and is motioned to Mengeles left, along with his father. Despite Eliezers joy at remaining with his father, uncertainty remains. Nobody knows whether left means the crematorium or the prison. As the prisoners move through Birkenau, they are horrified to see a huge pit where babies are being burned, and another for adults. Eliezer cannot believe his eyes, and tells his father that what they see is impossible, that humanity would never tolerate such a barbarism. Everybody in the column of prisoners weeps, and somebody begins to recite the Jewish prayer for the dead, the Kaddish. Eliezers father also recites the prayer. Eliezer, however, is skeptical. When Eliezer and his father are two steps from the edge of the pit, their rank is diverted and directed to a barracks. In the barracks, the Jews are stripped and shaved, disinfected with gasoline, showered, and clothed in prison uniforms. When Eliezers father asks for the bathroom, he is beaten by the Kapo. Eliezer is appalled at his own failure to defend his father. Soon they make the short march from Birkenau to Auschwitz, where they are quartered for three weeks, and where their prison numbers are tattooed on their arms. Eliezer and his father meet a distant relative from Antwerp, a man named Stein, who inquires after news of his family. Eliezer lies and tells him that he has heard about Steins family, and that they are alive and well. Despite all that they have seen, the prisoners continue to express their faith in God and trust in divine redemption. Finally, they are escorted on a four-hour walk from Auschwitz to Buna, the work camp in which they will be interned for months. Personal The fact that they had to be disinfected is ludicrousness because as we know now the Jews and the Nazis are equals in everything except belief.

Section 4. After the medical inspection, including a dental search for gold crowns, Eliezer is chosen by a Kapo to serve in a unit of prisoners whose job involves counting electrical fittings in a civilian warehouse. His father ends up serving in the same unit. Eliezer and his father are to be housed in the musicians block, which is headed by a kindly German Jew. In this block of prisoners, Eliezer meets Juliek, a Jewish violinist, and the brothers Yosi and Tibi. With the brothers, who are Zionists, Eliezer plans to move to Palestine after the war is over. Not long after Eliezer and his father arrive in Buna, Eliezer is summoned to the dentist to have his gold crown pulled. He manages to plead illness and postpone having the crown removed. Soon after, the dentist is

The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden


condemned to hanging for illegally trading in gold teeth. Eliezer does not pity the dentist, because he has become too busy keeping his body intact and finding food to eat to spare any pity. Idek, the Kapo in charge of Eliezers work crew, is prone to fits of violent madness. The narration then returns to Eliezers time at Buna. Eliezers father falls victim to one of Ideks rages. Eliezer reveals how much the concentration camp has changed him. He is concerned, at that moment, only with his own survival. Rather than feel angry at Idek, Eliezer becomes angry at his father for his inability to dodge Ideks fury. When Franek, the prison foreman, notices Eliezers gold crown, he demands it. Franeks desire for the gold makes him vicious and cruel. On his fathers advice, Eliezer refuses to yield the tooth. As punishment, Franek mocks and beats Eliezers father until Eliezer eventually gives up. Soon after this incident, both Idek and Franek, along with the other Polish prisoners, are transferred to another camp. Personal It is truly scary what our mind does in a moment of survival i.e. I was mad at my father for his inability to dodge Ideks Fury. In a normal case we would have the opposite thought.

Section 5. At the end of the summer of 1944, the Jewish High Holidays arrive: Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Despite their imprisonment and affliction, the Jews of Buna come together to celebrate Rosh Hashanah. On this solemn Jewish holiday, Eliezers religious rebellion intensifies, and he cannot find a reason to bless God in the midst of so much suffering. Eliezer mocks the idea that the Jews are Gods chosen people, deciding that they have only been chosen to be massacred. He comes to believe that man is stronger than God, more resilient and more forgiving. His denial of faith leaves him alone, or so he believes, among the 10,000 Jewish celebrants in Buna. Leaving the service, however, Eliezer finds his father, and there is a moment of communion and understanding between them. Soon after the Jewish New Year, another selection is announced. Eliezer has been separated from his father to work in the building unit. He worries that his father will not pass the selection, and after several days it turns out that Eliezers father is indeed one of those deemed too weak to work: he will be executed. He brings Eliezer his knife and spoon, his sons only inheritance. A second selection occurred among the condemned, and Eliezers father survived. With the arrival of winter, the prisoners begin to suffer in the cold. A rumor of the approaching Russian army gives him new hope, but the Germans decide to evacuate the camp before the Russians can arrive. Thinking that the Jews in the infirmary will be put to death prior to the evacuation, Eliezer and his father choose to be evacuated with the others. After the war, Eliezer learns that they made the wrong decisionthose who remained in the infirmary were freed by the Russians a few days later. Personal Faith can come under many hardships like when Eliezer tells himself that there is no reason to be thankful because of all that has happened to them in the past couple of months.

The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden


Section 6 & 7 Anybody who stops running is shot by the SS. Zalman, a boy running alongside Eliezer, decides he can run no further. He stops and is trampled to death. Eliezer forces himself to run along with the other prisoners only for the sake of his father. After running all night and covering more than forty-two miles, the prisoners find themselves in a deserted village. They keep one another awake so they will not die in the cold. Rabbi Eliahou finds his way into the shed where Eliezer and his father are collapsed. The rabbi is looking for his son. Eliezer falsely tells Rabbi Eliahou he has not seen the son, yet, during the run, Eliezer saw the son abandon his father, running ahead when it seemed Rabbi Eliahou would not survive. At last, the exhausted prisoners arrive at the Gleiwitz camp, crushing each other in the rush to enter the barracks. In the press of men, Eliezer and his father are thrown to the ground. Fighting for air, Eliezer discovers that he is lying on top of Juliek. Eliezer soon finds that he himself is in danger of being crushed to death by the man lying on top of him. Eliezer falls asleep to this music, and when he wakes he finds Juliek dead, his violin smashed. After three days without bread and water, there is another selection. When Eliezers father is sent to stand among those sentenced to die, Eliezer runs after him. In the confusion that follows, both Eliezer and his father are able to sneak back over to the other side. The prisoners are taken to a field, where a train of roofless cattle cars comes to pick them up. The prisoners are herded into the cattle cars and ordered to throw out the bodies of the dead men. Eliezers father, unconscious, is almost mistaken for dead and thrown from the car, but Eliezer succeeds in waking him. As they pass through German towns, some of the locals throw bread into the car in order to enjoy watching the Jews kill each other for the food. An old man manages to grab a piece, but Eliezer watches as he is attacked and beaten to death by his own son, who in turn is beaten to death by other men. One night, someone tries to strangle Eliezer in his sleep. Eliezers father calls Meir Katz, a strong friend of theirs, who rescues Eliezer, but Meir Katz himself is losing hope. When the train arrives at Buchenwald, only twelve out of the 100 men who were in Eliezers train car are still alive. Meir Katz is among the dead. Personal I would not have the ability to throw out the dead bodies, but then again I have never been in a situation bad enough to warrant that.

Section 8 & 9. The journey to Buchenwald has fatally weakened Eliezers father. On arrival, he sits in the snow and refuses to move. Eliezer tries to convince him to move, but he will not or cannot, asking only to be allowed to rest. When an air raid alert drives everyone into the barracks, Eliezer leaves his father and falls deeply asleep. Part of him thinks that he will be better off if he abandons his father and conserves his strength. He finds his father almost dead. Eliezer brings him soup and coffee. Again, however, Eliezer feels deep guilt, because part of him would rather keep the food for himself, to increase his own chance of survival. He is afflicted with dysentery, which makes him terribly thirsty, but it is extremely dangerous to give water to a man with dysentery. The prisoners whose beds surround Eliezers fathers bed steal his food and beat him. The next time the SS patrol the barracks, Eliezers father again cries for water, and the SS officer, screaming at Eliezers father to shut up, beats him in the head with his truncheon. The next morning, January 29, 1945, Eliezer wakes up to find that his father has been taken to the crematory. Eliezer remains in Buchenwald, thinking neither of liberation nor of his family, but only of food. On April 5, with the American army approaching, the Nazis decide to annihilate all the Jews left in the camp. Daily, thousands of Jews are murdered. On April 10, with about 20,000 people remaining in the camp, the Nazis decide to evacuate and kill everyone left in the camp. As the evacuation begins, however, an air-raid siren sounds, sending everybody indoors. When it

The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden


seems that all has returned to normal and that the evacuation will proceed as planned, the resistance movement strikes, driving the SS from the camp. Hours later, on April 11, the American army arrives at Buchenwald. Now free, the prisoners think only of feeding themselves. Eliezer is struck with food poisoning and spends weeks in the hospital, deathly ill. Personal At least they are evacuated and not killed because had all the Jews died in those death camps then there would be no one to tell the true story of the Holocaust.

Dawn
Section 1. Palestine. The narrator had to kill an Englishman in the morning. A beggar taught the narrator the difference between night and day when he was a boy. "Night is purer than day; it is better for thinking and loving and dreaming." The beggar taught him to look into the dusk and there would be a face that would appear. The face that appears is of a dead person. The night before the narrator does what he has to do, he looks into the night and sees his own face. A month ago one of their fighters that had been on a terrorist operation and was taken by the police. The "Old Man" decided that things had gone far enough and now he was not going to allow the English to rule any longer, so he ordered that a military officer be kidnapped. Captain John Dawson was kidnapped. The High Commissioner of Palestine said that the whole country would be held responsible for the murder of the Captain. The mother of the Captain demanded that the English give up the young Jew so that she could have her son back. They told her that "The Jews will never do it." The Palestinians would not give up the Captain because it would show a sign of weakness. The English would not agree to the pardon because it would show a sign of weakness. The narrator asked Gad who was going to kill the Captain? He replied "You are." Personal The sad part of this to me is that people for some reason view the Jewish to be a pathetic and measly community. I am truly unsure why because they are not bad people in any way shape or form.

Chapter 2 The narrator's name is Elisha. "Gad had recruited me for the Movement and brought me to Palestine. He had made me into a terrorist." Elisha was held in Buchenwald, a prison camp during World War 2. The Americans who liberated it offered to send him home, he rejected. He went to Paris and that is where he met Gad. "The study of philosophy attracted me because I wanted to understand the meaning of the events of which I had been the victim." Gad, one night, knocked on Elishas door and walked in. "In the Hassidic legends the messenger is always portrayed standing..." the man would not sit down. The struggle of the group was to make their homeland free from outside intervention. "You are listening to the voice of freedom"; was said by a girl every night on the Movements own radio station. Elisha and Gad were 2 of 5

The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden


who knew the girl. Elisha walks over to look in the mirror, he only sees eyes. He was told "Death . . . is a being without arms or legs or mouth or head; it is all eyes. If you ever meet a creature with eyes everywhere. You can be sure that it is death." Personal He is so strong with his faith compared to a lot of religious people in modern times who only follow certain channels of their religion.

Chapter 3 Elisha believes that he has killed before in raids on camps and convoys but he did not feel bad about planning the raids. The movements plans were always to kill as many English as possible. The Captain was being held at a Professor of Language's house. The first time that Elisha killed, he and 4 others raided a camp where they surrounded a group of soldiers and then began firing on them. When he goes out to kill he calls it putting on the gray colors of the SS. One night they had an operation where they went onto an army base with false documents that said that they were supposed to pick up Tommy guns and ammunition. They almost got away but the man at the gate received a message that the order was not in proper authority. David got shot and that is when he was captured. Elisha was not there but Gad was the organizer of the operation and takes blame for the capture. Elisha is used to losing friends every day. "This is war." is used frequently. Like they are trying to justify what they are doing. Personal The fact that he relates killing of any sort to the act of putting on the gray colors of the SS is quite disheartening because that will live with him all his life.

Chapter 4 Gideon was reported on by a neighbor and he went into an asylum where a friend worked. They slapped him, and got no reaction, they also tried to make him eat, and he would not. Playing dead had changed the mans hair color from brown to white. Gideon was called the Saint. The woman was saved by a head cold. The police brought a group of women in and had an analyst listen to their voices. The voices were compared to the voice on the radio. The woman had a cold that day and her voice was not the same. She was quickly eliminated from the suspects. Elisha was once saved by laughter. During his stay at a prison camp, he was supposed to go outside in very cold weather in his rags. The cell block was getting cleaned. He thought that the exposure would kill him because he had a cold, so he snuck into the barracks while they were not looking. When the cleaning crew found him the leader grabbed him by the throat; Elishas head swelled up and he looked funny. The leader let him go and started to laugh uncontrollably. Catherine befriended Elisha at summer camp in Normandy after the war. She was the only person that could talk to him. Catherine taught him what women did to men. On a walk one night Catherine told him that some of the other girls spoke

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German, Elisha expressed that he had nothing to say to them. She replied. "You don't have to say anything . . . all you have to do is love them Personal This is a tad funny for all the parts but when it gets to Eliezers part it is sad because he had a horrible experience and this is the only part that ever stuck with him as good.

Chapter 5 Elisha has a dream where all of the people in the room are people that he had known or killed. He kept asking people why they were all there but no one would answer, the beggar answered with "This is a night of many faces." The beggar told Elisha to go and talk to a child. The boy said that all of the people were there to witness him become a murderer. Elishas mother could only say "Poor boy, poor boy." They told the man in the dungeon that he was going to die at dawn and the man said that he was hungry. Elisha thought that it was impossible for the man to be hungry, because he believes that the stomach tells the brain it is not hungry because it is going to die. Elisha goes to give the prisoner the food, but he states that he does not want to be alone with the prisoner. The boy tells him that all of the people that are with him will go also. Gad ended up taking the food down to the prisoner. Elisha admits that he is afraid. He said that he was afraid to laugh at the man. There were two different kinds of light in the room; White, around the living. And black, around the ghosts. Elisha approaches the ghost of his father and asks him not to judge, then to the ghost of his mother and he starts to cry. The boy tells Elisha that they are not there to judge. Gad came from watching the Captain eat and he said that the man was not hungry but he ate with good appetite. Gad handed Elisha a revolver. Elisha asked if the prisoner had laughed. Gad replied "no" The stories that the prisoner told were funny but Gad said that he did not laugh. Elisha feels that David will come to the rescue. Elisha wants to go down and get to know who he is murdering. Elisha does not want anyone, including the ghosts to go with him to the dungeon. Personal When all the ghosts came into the room and he asks them not to judge him, because this is all for a good cause. It leads me to think of the SS again because they said that it too was to for a good cause.

Chapter 6 The cell was less stuffy than the room that everyone was in. "Under other circumstances he might have been my friend." Elisha tries to block his feelings by starts thinking about David. The Captain asks for some paper for a letter that will be sent to his son after the execution. Elisha knew an artist who had his right hand cut off by the Nazis; the Captain had hands like the artist. Elisha cannot hate the Captain, even though hate is needed for murder. The Captain asks "Why must you try to hate me ... Elisha thinks that this is a good question and says "In order to give my action a meaning which may somehow transcend it." It is now 10 to 5. They talk about feelings. Three minutes to five and Elisha promises that he will mail the letter the same day. All of the ghosts enter the room with one minute to go. The boy ghost says that this is the first time that he has seen an execution. The Captain is smiling. Elisha asks why and the Captain says. "I'm smiling . . . because

The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden


all of a sudden it has occurred to me that I don't know why I am dying." The captain's last word was the name of Elisha. The ghosts started to leave the cell and the Captain walked beside the little boy. Personal

DAY
Section I Eliezer is in Times Square with his girlfriend Kathleen. After discussing what to do for the evening, the two go to a diner where, much to Kathleen's irritation. The two then decided to go see a film. While crossing the street to the theatre. Eliezer is hit by a cab and dragged several feet through the intersection. While being rushed to the hospital he tells Kathleen clear instructions about who to tell and other little thing he needs her to perform for him. He then falls into a coma and does not wake up for five days. He is then driven to New York Hospital and is placed under the care of Dr. Russell. After three days he has surgery. Although because of complications they only focus on his hip and decided to deal with his other various aliments another time. On the fifth day in the hospital he regains consciousness. He realizes upon waking that he would have preferred to die. Dr. Russell visits him and informs him that his enemy is now a fever, which if it rises, will kill him. Personal Well for a begging to a story this is quite shocking because he is hit by a car only a couple paragraphs into the story.

Section 2 Eliezer recalls the night he first met Kathleen on a cold winter's evening in Paris. They're introduced by a friend, Shimon Yanal. Shimon and Eliezer are in the lobby of a theatre during the intermission of a ballet where they're meeting up with Shimon's friend Halina at the bar. Halina sees Kathleen and sends for her to join their group. Kathleen and Eliezer are introduced and are immediately attracted to one another. Shimon and Halina go back into the theatre to watch the second half of the play, leaving Eliezer and Kathleen alone. They walk around Paris for a few hours without talking. They eventually come to The Seine, a prominent commercial waterway in Paris, Eliezer stares into the river and thinks about death and his Grandmother. He recalls with fondness her spirituality and kindness. Eventually Kathleen touches him on the arm. Personal This is an endearing flash back that touches the heart but with what happened in the last chapter it is also kind of sad.

Section 3 Back in the hospital, Eliezer is woken up by a nurse giving him shots to control the fever. He's extremely thirsty but cant have any water because it will only make him sicker. He compares his feeling of being in a cast with his Grandmother dying in the gas chambers. He then recalls a story of when she

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comforted him after his father hit him. Dr. Russell comes in and tells him that Kathleen is in the hallway, Lost in his thoughts, Eliezer thinks that his Grandmother is waiting for him and he says that he doesn't want to see her, Kathleen comes in and talks with Eliezer. After a short time visiting Kathleen leaves. A nurse then gives Eliezer a shot of penicillin and another one to help him sleep. She leaves the room as Eliezer tries to fall asleep. Personal He really bring you into this abysmal state when he talks of his grandmother being in the gas chambers and him essentially being unable to help her in any way and is just left to watch his grandmother die.

Section 4 Back in Kathleens apartment in Paris, on the night they first met, she asks Eliezer to tell her about himself. He remarks that if he does she'll likely end up hating him. She says she's willing to take that chance. He's hesitant to tell her, because explaining who he his means telling her about all the people he loved who were killed in the concentration camps. Before he tells Kathleen about who he is, he recalls the last time he told a stranger his story. He was on a boat heading to South America. It was night and he was by himself starring out into the sea. A stranger came out to join him, but Eliezer could not make out the man's face. The two talk about the power of the sea, and how it can make a man feel powerless. After some prodding, Eliezer tells the man his story. He spends hours telling it, informing the man of his religious upbringing, about the horrors of the concentration camps, and the emptiness he now feels because everyone close to him has died. The man considers what Eliezer has said for some time. Eventually he breaks the silence and tells Eliezer that hes going to hate him. He repeats this phrase over and over again while banging his hands on the railing of the ship. Without facing Eliezer he leaves and walks inside. Eliezer never saw the man again. Back at Kathleens apartment, she tells him that Shimon told her that Eliezer was a saint because he's suffered so much. He laughs at this, saying that saints die while he is alive. He also says that suffering, like he has, brings out the worst in people, Rather than being appalled by this. Kathleen wants him to continue. He finally relents and tells her his life story. By the time he has finished telling his story he's wet with perspiration and morning has come. Kathleen says that she still thinks he's a saint. Eliezer remarks that he cant be a saint since he desires her. He then decides to show her he's not a saint by making love to her but not committing anything, since saints commit themselves in every task they do in life, they then make love. Afterwards Kathleen asks what will happen if she falls in love with him. He says that shell more than likely end up hating him. She says he's probably right. Personal This is a very odd chapter in the story because it holds no value to me to make the story a cohesive story.

Section 5 Back in the hospital, Eliezers fever vanished. The nurse comes into shave his beard. He refuses to look into a mirror. The nurse obliges. Dr. Russell asks Eliezer if he loves Kathleen like she loves him. Friends

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and colleagues come to visit him, and try to cheer him up by, they tell him that he'll be able to sue the cab company for a lot of money and will soon be rich. It's nearly 7 p.m., when Kathleen finally arrives. She's overly cheerful and flighty, almost as if shes hiding something. She tells him shes contacted a lawyer to help them sue the cab company. She wont sit dont and this makes Eliezer mad so he tells her to sit down and tell him whats wrong. Back in the present, a lawyer comes to visit Eliezer to talk to him about the accident. As they go over the details, Eliezer wants to make sure the cab driver won't have to pay for any of this. The lawyer tells him that only the cab company will pay for it, not the driver, Eliezer is relieved to hear this. Five years after they separated Kathleen contacts Eliezer. Both have moved to America now, Kathleen to Boston, Eliezer to New York. She asks him to come meet her in an apartment at a hotel in New York, to which he agrees. She asks Eliezer to help her, with a marriage that she just recently got out of. Personal Its interesting that he truly could not care much about suing the cab company.

Section 6 Kathleen asks Eliezer about something he said when he was in a coma. During those five days the only thing he said was Sarah. Eliezer tells her that Sarah was his mothers name. When he was a boy his teacher told him that when he died an angel would come to his grave after three days and ask who he was. He was to answer, "I am Eliezer, the son of Sarah." If he was to forget his mother's name, the angel would not take him to heaven and he would be doomed to spend all eternity in purgatory. As a child he lived in constant fear of forgetting his mother's name, because he would have to know it at the time of his death. He told Kathleen that he had not forgotten his mother's name. Hearing this she bursts into tears and Eliezer realizes that he never saw his mother cry. Personal This also lets me know that he has a strong connection to his religion and to his mother. Section 7 Sarah, Eliezer remembers, was also the name of a woman he'd met in Paris years before he'd met Kathleen. She asked him if he wanted to go make love, and after some urging he agreed to go with her to a hotel room. He was ashamed that his first time was going to be with a prostitute. When they got to the hotel room she sat down on the edge of the bed and then just sat there not saying anything. She was in her underwear when Eliezer told her he no longer wanted to make love; instead, he wanted her to tell him about herself. Like him, she too had been in the concentration camps. She was twelve years old when she first went to the camp. She told him that the officers and other high rankings officials used her sexually. It happened constantly, and thus prostitution eventually became her "career". The whole time she was telling him this, Eliezer felt physically ill and had his hands around his throat. Finally, he decided to flee. He ran from the room, out of tile hotel and into the streets, all the while with his hands still around his throat. For several weeks after their first encounter. Eliezer searched for Sarah, but he never saw her again Personal This is odd because he ended up not willing to be with her as a prostitute but wanted to talk to her about the horrible things she had happen to her kind of like Eliezer but without the rape.

The Night Trilogy Jesse Maplesden

Section 8 Eliezer recalls how things were when he and Kathleen first reunited in New York. They had a relationship that was essentially devoid of romance. They saw each other every night, often going out and doing social things like going to the theatre. Because of the suffering she'd endured Eliezer treated her like she was ill. He lied to her to try and make her feel better. He believed it was okay to lie to a sick person. Despite his trying to cure her, she became more and more detached from life and began to waste away. One day she told Eliezer that she loved him; she was very embarrassed by this revelation. Eliezer, still treating her like a sick person, told her he did as well. She didnt believe him and thought he was saying it because he pitied her. One night while lying in bed Kathleen proposed an agreement that they ll both help each other forget about the past and learn to live again, to love again, Eliezer absentmindedly agrees with her, This was the night before the accident. Personal Its sad that he pities her instead of actually full heartedly loving her like he should.

Section 9 For the ten weeks that he was in the hospital, three people visited Eliezer everyday: Kathleen, Dr. Russell, and his painter friend Gyula. Out of all of them, Gyula was the only one who figured out Eliezer's secret. Gyula is a Hungarian painter who has a very similar worldview as Eliezer. When he first comes to visit him in the hospital he tells Eliezer that he's going to paint his portrait. Cyulajoking tells him he can't die until it's finished. Each day Gyula would come to paint him and they'd talk. Eliezer tries to tell him about the accident, but Gyula doesnt want to hear about it. He tells Eliezer that he doesn't need to hear his stories to know. When he's finally finished with the painting he shows it to Eliezer. Looking at it Eliezer realizes that Gyula knows the accident was more of a suicide attempt than an actual accident. It's then that Gyula tells him he needs to stop thinking of the dead, for they no longer suffer. He needs to abandon them and care only for the land of the living, the land of his lover Kathleen and friends, like Gyula. Eliezer is hesitant to agree, since he doesn't want to abandon his past. Gyula insists that he must, and says he should chase his past away with a whip if necessary. Then on the day before Eliezer is released from the hospital, Gyula burns the portrait as a symbolic gesture. In the end, only the ashes are left behind in the room. Personal Well once I got to where Gyula figured out his secret I actually figured it out from the previous section.

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