Asked by dave

or many people, what you are willing to sacrifice reveals what you value most, especially in times of great suffering. In Night by Elie Wiesel, characters face unimaginable hardships during the Holocaust, and their choices to give up certain things show what matters most to them. For example, many characters must surrender fundamental aspects of their identities that were once defining and grounding. Specifically, Elie’s forfeiture of his religion highlights his forced prioritization of self-preservation over retention of former beliefs, thereby conveying Wiesel's advocacy that we reflect on the fragility of faith. give 3 grows 3 glows

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Here are three glows (strengths) and three grows (areas to improve), with brief, actionable suggestions.

Glows
- Clear thematic focus: You identify a strong, central theme—sacrifice revealing values amid suffering—which gives the paragraph purpose and direction.
- Textual anchor: Bringing Elie’s loss of faith into the paragraph grounds the claim in the text rather than leaving it purely abstract.
- Analytical move toward authorial intent: You connect Elie’s experience to Wiesel’s broader message (reflecting on faith’s fragility), which shows critical thinking beyond plot summary.

Grows
- Fix clarity and typos in the opening: “or many people” should be “For many people,” and the first sentence is wordy. Suggested revision: “For many people, what they are willing to sacrifice reveals their deepest values, especially in times of great suffering.”
- Add concrete textual evidence: Name or quote a scene that shows Elie’s loss of faith (for example, his reaction to the hanging of the young pipel or lines where he questions God). Also consider mentioning another character (e.g., Akiba Drumer or Moshe the Beadle) to show the pattern across characters.
- Tighten and nuance the thesis wording: “Forfeiture of his religion highlights his forced prioritization of self-preservation” is a bit clunky and absolute. Revise to something like: “Elie’s loss of faith illustrates how extreme suffering can force individuals to prioritize survival over previously held beliefs,” and avoid implying Wiesel’s single, prescriptive “advocacy” — instead say he “invites readers to reflect” on faith’s fragility.

If you want, I can rewrite the paragraph incorporating these changes and adding a specific quote.