WrayName:

E9 Per:

Night Reading Questions Ch. 6

1. What thought keeps Elie from quitting during the long evacuation march?

2. Rabbi Eliahu’s son abandons him. What does Elie think about this? How do Elie and his father encourage each other?

3. Why is Elie glad he did not tell Rabbi Eliahu about seeing the Rabbi’s son during the march? How does this compare to his treatment of Stein?

4. Elie has an important moment with God. What does he pray for? What does this reveal about his changing relationship with God (remember how he felt during Yom Kippur)?

5. Elie’s story is sometimes punctuated with strange, dreamlike moments. Such a moment in this chapter is an incident involving Juliek. What happens? How does Elie describe this moment? How would you describe the tone—why does this passage stand out in a book filled with the horrors of the Holocaust?

WrayName:

E9 Per:

Night Reading Questions Ch. 6

1. What thought keeps Elie from quitting during the long evacuation march?

2. Rabbi Eliahu’s son abandons him. What does Elie think about this? How do Elie and his father encourage each other?

3. Why is Elie glad he did not tell Rabbi Eliahu about seeing the Rabbi’s son during the march? How does this compare to his treatment of Stein?

4. Elie has an important moment with God. What does he pray for? What does this reveal about his changing relationship with God (remember how he felt during Yom Kippur)?

5. Elie’s story is sometimes punctuated with strange, dreamlike moments. Such a moment in this chapter is an incident involving Juliek. What happens? How does Elie describe this moment? How would you describe the tone—why does this passage stand out in a book filled with the horrors of the Holocaust?

WrayName:

E9 Per:

Night Reading Questions Ch. 6

1. What thought keeps Elie from quitting during the long evacuation march?

2. Rabbi Eliahu’s son abandons him. What does Elie think about this? How do Elie and his father encourage each other?

3. Why is Elie glad he did not tell Rabbi Eliahu about seeing the Rabbi’s son during the march? How does this compare to his treatment of Stein?

4. Elie has an important moment with God. What does he pray for? What does this reveal about his changing relationship with God (remember how he felt during Yom Kippur)?

5. Elie’s story is sometimes punctuated with strange, dreamlike moments. Such a moment in this chapter is an incident involving Juliek. What happens? How does Elie describe this moment? How would you describe the tone—why does this passage stand out in a book filled with the horrors of the Holocaust?