Subjects:
Eliezer Wiesel was twelve when he first met Moshe the Beadle. At this time in his life, he was a big believer in God. He studied the Talmud during the day and at night he prayed at the synagogue. One day Eliezer asked his father, who was a rabbi, “Can you find me a master to guide me in my studies of the cabbala?”(1) But his father simply replied, “You’re too young for that. Maimonides said it was only at thirty that one had the right to venture into the perilous world of mysticism.” (1-2) In return to this statement made by his father, he went out to find his own. This is when he found Moshe. Almost every evening, they would talk about God and sit in the synagogue and pray. Moshe became Eliezer’s m
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Since Moshe was a foreign Jew, he had been taken away to a concentration camp. For the rest of the book, after the Nazis take over his hometown, Sighet, Eliezer starts to question his God. So he put his shoes in a thick layer of mud so that they would not be able to tell. He “thanked God, in an improvised prayer, for having created mud in His infinite and wonderful universe. He had escaped only to be able to tell the townspeople what he had seen.
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