Encountering Evil: Night

Lesson 10
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ELA

Unit 2

8th Grade

Lesson 10 of 28

Objective


Analyze how Wiesel makes connections between individuals, ideas, and events to convey the dehumanization he endured in the concentration camps during the Holocaust.

Readings and Materials


  • Book: Night by Elie Wiesel  pp. 34 – 46

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A Note for Teachers


  • Today's lesson contains sensitive content that may be upsetting or triggering for students. Emphasize respectful communication, critical thinking, and context understanding prior to engaging in today's reading. Name for students resources they can leverage within the classroom or school day to process their emotions.
  • Wiesel uses the word "gypsy" on page 37, which is considered to be an offensive slur by many Roma people. The Roma are an ethnic group that lives primarily in Europe. During the Holocaust, an estimated 250,000 Roma were murdered in Nazi concentration camps because of their perceived racial inferiority. 
  • As a part of intellectual preparation, revisit student answers in the Lesson 1 Anticipation Guide (G8, U2), paying particular attention to questions 3 and 7 to prepare for the Target Task and Key Questions. Based on student responses, determine how to guide students through the conversations related to today's lesson.

Target Task


Discussion & Writing Prompt

On page 37, Wiesel writes, "The child I was had been consumed by the flames. All that was left was a shape that resembled me. My soul had been invaded—and devoured—by a black flame." Why does he draw these connections? How do they affect the reader's comprehension or experience in understanding what is happening to Wiesel?

Sample Response

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Key Questions


  • Reread page 34. Consider why Wiesel might describe his experiences in such a vivid and repetitive manner. How does this help the reader to connect with and understand the gravity of what he went through?

  • How are the prisoners dehumanized by the Nazis (and other prisoners in positions of power)? What are the physical and psychological effects of this dehumanizing treatment? Provide specific evidence from pages 32–42 to support your thinking.

  • In response to the short talk given to the prisoners by the Polish Blockälteste, Wiesel writes, "Those were the first human words" (p. 41). What does he mean by this, and how does the Polish man's treatment of the prisoners contrast with the treatment they have received from other people in positions of power so far? Provide evidence to support your thinking.

Vocabulary


Text-based

camaraderie

n.

(p. 41)

friendship; a feeling of connection and common purpose with others

elude

v.

(p. 41)

 to escape or avoid, physically or mentally

veritable

adj.

(p. 44)

true; undeniable

Homework


Note: Tonight's reading contains sensitive content that may be upsetting or triggering for students, including references to sex and sex trafficking.

To ensure that students are prepared for the next lesson, have students complete the following reading for homework. Use guidance from the next lesson to identify any additional language or background support students may need while independently engaging with the text.

  • Book: Night by Elie Wiesel  pp. 47 – 58 — end at "…to say yes for all eternity."

While reading, answer the following questions.

  • Who is Franek? How does he treat Eliezer and Eliezer's father?

  • Who is Juliek? Who are Yossi and Tibi?

  • Who is Idek? How does he treat Eliezer?

  • What does the Jewish dentist want from Eliezer? Why does Franek also want this?

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Common Core Standards


  • RI.8.3 — Analyze how a text makes connections among and distinctions between individuals, ideas, or events (e.g., through comparisons, analogies, or categories).
  • RI.8.4 — Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative, connotative, and technical meanings; analyze the impact of specific word choices on meaning and tone, including analogies or allusions to other texts.

Supporting Standards

L.8.6
RI.8.1
RI.8.2
RI.8.4
RI.8.10
SL.8.1
SL.8.6
W.8.1
W.8.1.a
W.8.1.b
W.8.9
W.8.9.b
W.8.10

Next

Evaluate and analyze how being imprisoned in concentration camps impacts characters' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Analyze what these changes reveal about human nature.

Lesson 11
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