Past SS guards armed with tommy guns, Elie disembarks and follows the men's line to the left; the women pass to the right. He never sees his mother or sister Tzipora again. A friendly insider advises fourteen-year-old Elie to claim to be eighteen and tells his father to subtract a decade from his fifty years. A cynical voice curses the stupidity of Jews who aren't aware that Auschwitz is a death camp where they will be "burned. Frizzled away. Turned into ashes." A flicker of revolt enlivens a few sturdy men; calming voices urge all to rely on faith. Dr. Mengele, an SS officer, surveys the men, sending the unfit to the crematory, which belches foul smoke and flames into the black sky. Elie claims to be a young farmer. He and his father follow the healthy men to work details. A truck delivers a load of babies, which are tossed into a fiery pit. Elie considers throwing himself into the electric wire rather than be burned with the infants.
Elie's father realizes that no external agency will rescue them. Weeping, he prays, but Elie rebels against his silent god. As they stay together and march past the pit to their barracks, Elie loses his opportunity to kill himself. Vicious trustees force them to strip for another selection. The strongest inmates become crematory workers. Elie remains with his father as the barber shaves their heads. The Wiesels greet friends. Elie lapses into a meditation on self-preservation. Forced into the cold night to another barracks, they disinfect their bodies, then shower. At a third barracks, attendants toss them badly fitting prison clothes, which they exchange among themselves for a better fit.






















