
Quote #1:
"'You mustn't rejoice too soon, my boy. There's selection here too. More often than outside. Germany doesn't need sick Jews. Germany doesn't need me. When the next transport comes, you'll have a new neighbor. So listen to me, and take my advice: get out of the hospital before the next selection!" (74).
This is important because if Elie had stayed in the hospital, at the time that the Germans believed that the allied foreces were invading, he would have been liberated within a few days.
This quote makes me heartbroken. Its sad to see that if he had stayed that he probably have been liberated along with his father. It was in this split second decision that it essentially cost him his father.
"I was thinking of this when I heard the sound of a violin. The sound of a violin, in this dark shed, where the dead were heaped on the living. What madman could be playing the violin here, at the brink of his own grave? Or was it really an hallucination? It must have been Juliek" (90).
This is important because Wiesel was trying to display that there was hope even in the middle of the hell that they were living. Despite the absolutely terrible abuse that they suffered at the hands of the SS, somebody was trying to retain their humanity.
This quote makes me feel that there must have been some sign of hope but it would be very difficult to see it from their position. It is also depressing because you don't know if its real or not.
"The hours went by. Our eyes were tired from staring at the horizon, waiting for the liberating train to appear. It arrived only very late that evening. An infinitely long train, composed of roofless cattle cars. The SS shoved us inside, a hundred per car" (97).
This is an important quote because it shows that they had a complete lack of freedom and that they were treated like cattle. Killed and moved according to the will of their captors.
This quote makes me feel incredibly sad that people that were no different than you, or me or the Germans were treated with such hatred. I couldn't believe that they were transported that way and that they were disposed of in large ovens. So incredibly terrible.