¨Life? I no longer care to live. I am alone. But I wanted to come back and warn you. Only no one is listening to me...¨ Moishe the Beadle pg 7, Night.
Moishe had seen awful terrors when he encountered the Gestapo in Polish territory. The quote from Moishe shows him giving up. He begins to lose hope in his friends and his own survival. I think that once you lose hope, you soon after die. What Moishe saw was horrific. I assume he would have died (with the other Jews that were with him) if he wasn't so determined to warn his friends. His purpose was to at least try to give warning. His survival was miraculous, he shouldn't be giving up. However I think it was noble of him to suffer all the way back just to give his friends a heads up.
I can connect this to a video we watched in Social Studies, ¨A Survivor Remembers¨ where a Holocaust survivor spoke about her experiences. She said that if you had hope, and imagination, you survived longer. This is probably because if you dwelled on the worst, the emotional turmoil will destroy you. Also, if you were strong, with something to live for, you can make it. Moishe had his friends to go on for so they could at least have a chance. The theme my quote portrayed was Hopelessness. Moishe the Beadle had no hope after his friends refused to hear his desperate cries of warning. He lost hope for his own, and even his friends’ lives. I wonder how long Moishe will survive since he has lost hope. How could he no longer care about his life?
Hope is one of the most powerful emotions you can feel. It's the lighthouse that guides you on a stormy night out at sea. The candle that sits on a desk at night illuminating the room so that thoughts can flow onto paper. Many victims of the Holocaust never lost hope and that's one thing that if held onto, can never be taken by anyone.
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