Elie Wiesel Reflection

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Maintaining Faith
Elie Wiesel was a Jew born on September 30, 1928, in Sighet, Transylvania. He grew up with three sisters: Hilda, Bea, and Tzipora. When World War II began, many Jews were sent to concentration camps. At the age of fifteen, Wiesel and his family were sent to Auschwitz.. Later on, he and his father were transported to Buchenwald, where his father died shortly before liberation in April of 1945. During the year he was in the concentration camps, Wiesel endured starvation, hard labor, bad treatment, terrible conditions, and harsh environments He lost his mother, father, and his youngest sister, Tzipora (Elie Biographical).
Following his liberation and freedom from the horrifying and horrendous camps, Wiesel made a vow of silence to never reveal his experiences there. However, while studying in France to become a journalist, Wiesel came across a French writer, Francois Mauriac, who persuaded him to write about his experiences in the concentration camps. Wiesel agreed and released his memoir, Night (Elie Biography).
Wiesel won the Nobel Peace Price in 1986 for Night and his other literary works which reveal his concentration camp experiences. Before that, in 1976, Wiesel was appointed the position of Andrew W. Mellon Professor in Humanities at Boston University. He was also chosen as Chairman of the President's Commission on the Holocaust in 1978. (Elie Academy).
In Wiesel's memoir Night, a Jewish teenage boy, named Eliezer Wiesel, and his family live in Sighet, Transylvania, with Germans for many years. During that time, Elie learns Jewish mysticism from his teacher, Moshe the Beadle. Moshe is a foreign-born Jew who is deported to just outside of Sighet. Moshe, as well as the other foreign-born Jews, are forced ...

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...ocide, Night should be included in a list of works of high literacy. It is lesson to the world to try to prevent this from happening again, because it may. The genocide of Rwanda was similar to the Holocaust. It is a more recent reminder that history can repeat itself. In this way, the novel is beneficial to society because it is a reminder to stay vigilant and to get rid of prejudice. Geography, religion, or ethnicity does not affect one's ability to relate to this novel because, in many places, there are many religions, many different ethnicities, and many individual differences overall. Because of these differences, prejudice can easily take over because, as humans, people fear what is different and are unaccepting of that difference. Night's ability to relate to many different types of people makes it a great edition to the list of works of high literacy merit.

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