Night Chapter 3 Audio
Posted By admin On 04.10.19Read Chapter 3 from the story That Night by sydneysh99 (TrustMeI'mANerd) with 2,843 reads. Adrienette, pregnant, miraculousladybug. A several weeks went. When chapter 3 opens, Eliezer and his family have been forced from their homes in Sighet, Transylvania, and deported in cattle cars to Birkenau, a selection checkpoint for all Auschwitz newcomers. Hear and read the King James Audio Bible online, 1 Kings Chapter 3. 1 Kings Chapter 3. Child died in the night; because she overlaid it. 1KINGS 3:20 And she.
. The Jews must leave all of their cherished possessions—and optimistic illusions—in the cattle car as they move forward to be admitted to the concentration camp. Men are sent to the left, women to the right.

Night Chapter 3 Audio Book

Although he does not know it at the moment, this is the last time will ever see his mother and youngest sister Tzipora. Eliezer’s one thought is not to. Already, some Jews are being beaten and shot. A kind prisoner comes up to Eliezer and his father, asking them their ages. On hearing that Eliezer is 15 and his father is 50, the prisoner tells them they should be 18 and 40. Age can mean the difference between life and death.

Another prisoner tells them they would have been better off hanging themselves than to come here. Hadn’t they heard of Auschwitz in 1944?
The new prisoners all have to admit that no, they hadn’t heard about Auschwitz. The prisoner points to the smokestacks and asks if they know what’s being burned there? Basically he says: that’s where you’re going to die. (But in more words and some curses.).
The male prisoners are in a line being questioned by Dr. Mengele and divided into two groups: one group, presumably, is going to be working; the other group will head straight to the crematorium. Josef Mengele was an infamous Nazi doctor who selected which prisoners would be sent to labor and which would die.). When Eliezer is questioned, and says that he’s than 15 and a student. Near Eliezer, there’s a pit of fire into which small children are being dumped—alive. Eliezer comments, as the narrator, 'Is it any wonder that ever since then, sleep tends to elude me?' .
It seems for a while that death is imminent. The male prisoners, including Eliezer’s father, are weeping.