Answer:
1. He always admired and respected his father, but in the camp he does not try to fight for his father when a Gypsy deportee knocks his father down.
Step-by-step explanation:
Elie Wiesel's autobiographical memoir "Night" tells the experiences of the narrator and author Eliezer Weisel's life during the German discrimination of the Jews. This memoir also acts as a first person's account of the Holocaust and the affects it has on the people, especially the Jews.
Eliezer used to have huge respect and admiration for his father before the Jews of Sighet were captured and taken to the concentration camps. But once they were all taken to the camps, he began to have a sense of survival for his own life than thinking of his father's safety. he knows he have to be alive first to make sure his father also lives. This was the one thing that seemed to change in him, seeing the Gypsy deportee knock his father down but he did nothing to save him. He had to learn to keep himself alive.