Characters
Plot Points
Themes
Who Said It?
Vocabulary
100

This poor jack-of-all-trades at the Hasidic house of worship becomes Eliezer's teacher of the Kabbalah

Moishe the Beadle
100

The train from Sighet arrives around midnight in which concentration camp?

Auschwitz-Birkenau

100

The book's title and central theme: this image represents death, the loss of faith, and a world without God

Night

100

"Jews, listen to me...I see a fire! I see flames, huge flames"

Madame Schächter

100

Prejudice, discrimination, or hostility directed at Jewish people

Antisemitism

200

As Eliezer loses his faith in God, his bond grows stronger with this character

His father

200

What Madame Schachter sees and warns the other train passengers about

Fire/flames

200
This image first appears on the train ride to the concentration camp, and becomes a recurring image of destruction throughout the book

Flames/fire

200

"I wanted to return to Sighet to describe to you my death so that you might ready yourselves while there is still time...I wanted to come back and warn you. Only on one is listening to me."

Moishe the Beadle

200

The fenced-off section of town where the Jews of Sighet were forced to live before deportation

Ghetto

300

This Kapo at the electrical parts warehouse is prone to sudden fits of rage -- especially when Eliezer discovers his secret

Idek

300

On the advice of a veteran inmate, Eliezer lies to Dr. Mengele about these two things (I'll accept either one or both)

His age (eighteen, not fifteen) and his occupation (farmer, not student)

300

Moishe the Beadle warns the town, but no one listens. The Jews of Sighet keep telling themselves everything will be fine.

Denial (not believing the warnings)?

300

"Bite your lips, little brother...Don't cry. Keep your anger, your hate, for another day, for later. The day will come but not now...Wait. Clench your teeth and wait..."

The French girl

300

The Jewish prayer for the dead. Prisoners recite it for themselves on the first night in camp.

Kaddish

400

This relative from Antwerp visits Eliezer and his father weekly. He vanishes after a transport arrives with bad news of his wife and sons.

Stein

400

Franek the foreman torments Eliezer's father about his inability to do this one thing

March in step

400

In Chapter 1, Eliezer prays and studies constantly. By Chapter 5, he refuses to bless God and won’t fast on Yom Kippur. This theme tracks what Eliezer is losing.

Loss of faith

400

"Where He is? This is where-hanging here from this gallows"

Eliezer

400

A prisoner put in charge of other prisoners and work crews — Idek and Franek both held this job.

Kapo

500

The block's deep-voiced singer of Hasidic melodies who gets taken for selection. He asks his friends to say Kaddish for him, but they forget

Akiba Drumer

500
Eliezer chooses to evacuate with his father instead of staying in the infirmary. After the war, he learns that this was the fate of the patients who stayed behind

The Russians liberated them two days after he left

500

Eliezer’s biggest fear in every selection and march is being separated from this person

Father

500

From the next infirmary cot, this person said he had more faith in Hitler than in anyone else, because Hitler alone had kept all his promises to the Jewish people. (pp. 80–81)

Who is Eliezer’s faceless neighbor (the Hungarian Jew)

500

The process where SS doctors examined the prisoners and wrote down the numbers of anyone too weak to work

Selection

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