Night
Discussion Questions, pages 1-20
- Who was Moshe the Beadle?
- Why did Eliezer spend a lot of time with Moshe?
- What happened to Moshe that caused a great change in
him?
- How did the rest of the community react to what Moshe
told them?
- What were the ghettos?
- At first, how did the Jews of Sighet feel about the
ghettos?
- Who offered Eliezer’s family safe refuge?
- On what day of the week was Eliezer’s family expelled?
Discussion Questions, pages 21-43
- Why did the Hungarian lieutenant move among the
prisoners with a basket?
- Who was Madame Schachter?
- Who were the SS men?
- What was Eliezer’s last view of his mother and sister?
- Why did Eliezer and his father lie to Dr. Mengele?
- Why did his father wish Eliezer had gone with his
mother?
- What was actually happening to the women?
- What is the Kaddish?
- According to the SS officer, what was the only way to
avoid the furnaces?
- Why did the gypsy strike Eliezer’s father?
- To what new camp were the prisoners marched?
Discussion Questions, Pages 45-62
- Why was Eliezer sent to the dentist?
- Who beat Eliezer in front of the French girl?
- Why did Eliezer give his father “marching lesons”?
Discussion Questions, pages 63-80
- What is Rosh Hashanah?
- What was Dr. Megele’s attitude during the “selection”?
- What sorts of “presents” did Eliezer’s father give
him?
- How did Eliezer end up in the hospital?
- Why was the camp being evacuated?
Discussion Questions, pages 81-92
- What happened to Zalman?
- How did Eliezer and his father help each other stay
alive?
- How did Eliezer avoid suffocation?
- How did Eliezer’s father avoid being “selected” at
Gleiwitz?
Discussion Questions, pages 93-108
- Why did the two men try to throw Eliezer’s father from
the carriage?
- Why did the living “rejoice” when the order came to
throw out the corpses?
- How did the prisoners in the wagon act like animals?
- How did Meir Katz save Eliezer’s life?
- Why did Eliezer decide to be an “invalid”?
- Why didn’t he see his father die?
- Explain the line at the end of the book that reads, “A
corpse gazed back at me.”