Who is akiba drumer in the book night




















Dannette Polizzi Explainer. How was Moshe the Beadle different? He looks physically different from the other people in Sighet. He has a physical limp and looks "physically awkward. Mahy Larrauri Explainer. What happened to Stein in night? Answer and Explanation: There is never a clear answer on Stein's fate. It is assumed that he died after learning of the truth fate of his family when a transport of prisoners from his hometown arrived.

As Stein said, the only thing that kept him alive was knowing that his wife and young sons were still alive. Zsolt Lebereht Explainer. What is a Pipel?

Pipel plural Pipels historical, rare Among Nazi concentration camp detainees, an attractive male child who receives special favor or privileges by maintaining a relationship with another detainee who has been granted some authority over other detainees.

Zada Delage Pundit. Who is Maria in night? Maria is a fictional character in the play Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare. She is a servant in Olivia's household. Maria is shown to have a friendly relationship with Sir Toby Belch, and exhibits a witty attitude.

Mitchel Doniga Pundit. What is the slogan for Auschwitz? Arbeit Macht Frei. Reyes Gagliano Pundit. Who does the prisoner next to Elie in the hospital think has kept the most promises? Hitler is the person who had kept the most promises because he never broke his promise to exterminate all the Jewish people.

Slavi Manjari Pundit. Maria The Wiesels' servant, Maria pleads with them to leave the unguarded ghetto and seek safety with her. Her manic state progresses from moans to hysterical cries of "Fire! A terrible fire! Oh, that fire!

Bela Katz The son of a Sighet tradesman, Bela is selected to load the crematory and ordered to put his father's corpse into a crematory oven. Yechiel The brother of Sighet's rabbi who, on the night that Elie arrives at Birkenau, weeps for their doom.

Akiba Drumer A deep-voiced singer who stirs the hearts of inmates with Hasidic melodies sung at bedtime, Drumer applies cabbalistic numerology to scripture and predicts deliverance from Buna within weeks. After the selection at Block 36, he departs in despair, his faith destroyed. His fellow inmates forget his parting request for a Kaddish. Later, he shares crucial information about Idek, the manic Kapo, and, in the dark barracks at Gleiwitz, Juliek gives a final performance from a Beethoven concerto, a violinist's blessing.

The next morning, he is dead and his violin trampled. Louis A distinguished Dutch violinist in the orchestra block, Louis complains because Jews are not allowed to play Beethoven's music.

Hans A Berlin musician in the orchestra block, he eases Elie's concern about his assignment to the electrical warehouse. Franek A former student from Warsaw who plays in the orchestra block and serves as foreman of the electrical warehouse, Franek keeps Elie near his father while they work, then drops his friendly treatment by demanding Elie's gold dental crown.

Franek's willingness to torment Elie's father suggests that the foreman has lost his humanity in the daily supervision of inmates. Yossi and Tibi Czech brothers who work at the electrical warehouse after their parents are killed at Birkenau, Yossi and Tibi are Zionists who befriend Elie and hum Jewish melodies as they dream of immigrating to Palestine. When Block 36 undergoes selection, the brothers join Elie in a successful dash past Dr.

Mengele's life-or-death assessing eyes. Tibi and Yosi are Zionists. Along with Eliezer, they make a plan to move to Palestine after the war. When he arrives at Auschwitz, Eliezer encounters the historically infamous Dr.

He also directed horrific experiments on human subjects at the camp. Despite the fact that they also faced the cruelty of the Nazis, many Kapos were as cruel to the prisoners as the Germans. During moments of insane rage, Idek beats Eliezer. A devout Jewish prisoner whose son abandons him in one of many instances in Night of a son behaving cruelly toward his father. Trying to bolster his spirit, Eliezer lies to Stein and tells him that his family is still alive and healthy.

The resentment he feels for his father haunts him. The haunting grows worse when Chlomo begins yelling to Eliezer for water. A guard silences him with a blow from a truncheon. At some point, Chlomo is taken away to the crematory still breathing. Eliezer could only stand by. The narrating survivor of the camps is Eliezer, who became A Deeply fascinated by Hasidic Judaism, he finds an indulgent teacher in Moshe the Beadle.

The first cracks in his faith begin, however, when Moshe returns from deportation changed in demeanor and warning about impending doom. The cracks widen inside with every night spent in the camps. The crack is not exactly a rejection of God; it is a dismissal shouted out in anger.

Eliezer had once believed profoundly and had lamented before God but he could no longer do so. Eliezer represents a truly aesthetic individual who represents the best of European civilization. He is aware of the myths of his people and their history.

As such he is able to tell his tale in terms of them with references to psalms, gospel stories, and personages like Job and indirectly Abraham, Isaac, and the three children in the furnace. He is truly mystified to account for the camps both in terms of religion but also morality. Consequently, he is bent solely on survival and only his stomach takes note of time. Still he survives, but merely as a corpse in a mirrored gaze just waking up from the long night.

A Alphonse In the concentration camps, the best heads of the block to be under are Jews. C Franek The foreman in the electrical warehouse is a former student from Warsaw named Franek. F Juliek Juliek, along with Chlomo and Moshe the Beadle, is one of the most important characters in the novel. G Meir Katz A farmer who used to bring fresh vegetables to the Wiesels.



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