Shortly after arriving at Birkenau Elie Wiesel saw "babies" burning in a pit. It is not made clear whether or not these babies were dead or alive, or were young children rather than actual infants. This is what "murders his God".
The wagon emptied babies into the flaming pit during the Holocaust, which made Elie question his faith in God. Witnessing the innocent children being burned alive shook his belief in a just and merciful God who would allow such atrocities to happen.
There were around 80 people crowded into Elie's wagon during the Holocaust.
In the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, the final destination of the cattle wagon carrying Elie and his fellow prisoners is Auschwitz, a concentration and extermination camp in Poland.
Elie witnessed babies and children being thrown into the flaming pit at the concentration camp. This horrific sight left a lasting impact on him and served as a stark reminder of the cruelty of the Holocaust.
he compared the world to a cattle wagon.
Near the beginning of the book when they were piled in the cattle wagon Elie said, the world is like a cattle wagon.
Elie Wiesel starts praying in the book "Night," but he struggles with his faith throughout the Holocaust. He questions God's presence and struggles to maintain his faith in the face of such extreme suffering and evil.
Elie and his father are similar in their shared determination to survive the Holocaust and their love for each other. However, they are different in their beliefs and behaviors, with Elie questioning his faith and struggling to care for his father at times, while his father remains steadfast in his faith and relies on Elie for support.
Elie Wiesel looses his father, mother, sisters, and childhood.
The bond grew stronger between Elie and his father through the terrible journey through the concentration camps.
Moshe the beadle asks Elie, "Why do you pray?" and "Why do you fast?" These questions challenge Elie to think critically about his faith and to reflect on the purpose behind his religious practices.
meir killed his father over bread while elies father gave elie some bread and when elie was being chocked he steped in to help his son.
One conflict in "Night" by Elie Wiesel is the internal struggle Elie faces as he grapples with his faith in God in the face of extreme suffering in the concentration camps. Another conflict is the physical and emotional torment endured by Elie and his fellow prisoners as they struggle to survive and maintain their humanity in the brutal conditions of the Holocaust.