Characters
Plot
Literary terms
Important details
Important details
100

What was the biggest reason Moshe the Beadle important to Elie?

What is he instructed him in the mystical aspects of the Jewish faith.

100

Where is the story set?

What is Sighet, Transylvania.

100

Madame Schachter’s visions and screaming are examples of what literary term?

What is foreshadowing.

100

What was Elie’s primary concern as he and his family were herded from the train?

What is to stay with his father.

100

What was one of the “tricks” Elie uses to survive selection?

What is he gives himself “color” by running and pinching his cheeks

200

What did Madame Schachter see in her vision?

What is a furnace and flames.

200

Before Elie's community was deported from Sighet, what happened to them?

What is they were placed into two ghettos.

200

"Within a few minutes, the camp looked like an abandoned ship" is an example of what literary device?

What is simile

200

Which of the following deaths had an intense impact on the prisoners?

What is the hanging of the pipel—the young assistant of Dutch Oberkapo

200

During his time in the concentration and death camps, what does Elie focus on more than anything else?

What is finding food.

300

After Moshe returned from his deportation how did the community react to him?

What is the community rejected Moshe’s “stories” and went on with life as usual.

300

After being released, what does Wiesel say he and the other ex-prisoners think about revenge?

What is they didn't think about it all; all they wanted was food.

300

Wiesel says of Rabbi Eliahou, “He was like one of the old prophets in the stories of the Old Testament”…this reference to the literature of the Hebrew people is an example of:

What is allusion.

300

What was Elie’s decision about fasting on Yom Kippur? Why did he make that decision?

What is he did not fast as an act of rebellion against God’s silence.

300

What did Elie dream of when he dreamed of a better world?

What is a world with no bells to regulate life. "The bell regulated everything. It gave me orders and I executed them blindly. I hated that bell. Whenever I happened to dream of a better world, I imagined a universe without a bell" (72).

400

How old is Elie during the course of the novel?

What is ages 12-15. Elie Wiesel was born September 30, 1928. The novel begins in 1941 -- Wiesel tells us on page 1, "I was 12."

400

In the camp hospital, Elie’s neighbor remarks that there is only one person/being/group who has kept his/their promises to the Jews. Who is it?

Who is Hitler

400

The repetition of ideas such as silence, night, and the taste and quality of the soup are examples of ... 

What is motif

400

What is the Kaddish?

What is the Jewish prayer for the dead.

400

What did Elie realize about Rabbi Eliahou’s son just after the evacuation?

What is the son had been trying to lose his father as the men were all running.

500

Was Elie Wiesel's father only concerned with his family's safety?

What is no -- he cared very deeply about his community as well and was a very respected, caring, and practical man.

500

After Elie’s father asks the guard where the lavatory is and is then knocked to the ground by the guard, what does Elie realize?

What is that he has changed dramatically in a very short amount of time because he barely reacts to this horrific act.

500

Wiesel’s description of the Rabbi struggling to keep up, “his son had seen him losing ground, limping, staggering, shuffling, and stumbling” contains and example of

What is alliteration.

500

Why does Elie say, “No better than Rabbi Eliahou’s son had I withstood the test”?

What is Elie abandoned his father during the alert at Buchenwald.

500

At the very end of Night, what does Elie see? 

A corpse looking back at him from a mirror

M
e
n
u