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Elie is haunted by the look in the eyes of the corpse because it represents the loss of humanity and the dehumanizing effects of the Holocaust. The empty stare symbolizes the death of the person's spirit and identity, leaving only a lifeless body behind. This traumatic image serves as a constant reminder of the atrocities he witnessed and the inhumanity of the Nazis.
Inferi
Elie sees a reflection of himself when he looks in the mirror.
Eliezer cannot forget to look in the mirror because it symbolizes his internal struggle and self-reflection on the horrors of his experiences during the Holocaust. The gaze of the corpse reminds him of the loss of humanity, the brutality he witnessed, and the guilt of surviving. It serves as a haunting reminder of the atrocities he faced and the need to confront the past.
At the end of the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, Liberated from the concentration camp, Eliezer is left a mere shell of his former self, physically and emotionally. He struggles to find meaning and faith after witnessing the atrocities of the Holocaust. The book concludes with Eliezer looking into a mirror and seeing a stranger staring back at him.
Elie sees himself in the mirror at the end of the book as dead corpse gazing back at him.
How I get back a network if I press forget this network
Yes Elie Wiesel has visited Auscwitz since he has been liberated
No. It would damage the corpse but the corpse would remain dead.
Elie kept saying he did not feel well and promise to go back and stayed repeating the same excuse. read the book
Forget it, move on.
Elie saw himself as a corpse gazing back at him when he looks in the mirror at the end of the book and it is significant because he thought he did not deserve to survive.