Night By Elie Wiesel Analysis

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Weisel reveals how forgetting the lives lost during the Holocaust would kill the victims a second time. In the memoir Night, Elie Wiesel describes all of his horrific experiences during his time at the concentration camps, and he recalls the tragic incidents that happened to others. As Elie reflects on all of the people who died, he writes, “To forget would be not only dangerous but offensive; to forget the dead would be akin to killing them again.” Elie states this because he knows how dangerous forgetting the Holocaust could be, he knows that to forget the millions of people who died would be a disservice to their remembrance after all of the horrendous events they had to endure. Not only is this idea of remembrance expressed in Night, it …show more content…

Because if we forget, we are guilty, we are accomplices'' (Wiesel 118). This shows how Elie believes that it is super important to remember the dead because if they don't they will also be guilty of forgetting to acknowledge the deceased even after all of the pain they endured. Elie also intended this message as a strong reminder that if we forget the Holocaust, then it would allow history to repeat itself and diminish the suffering of those who died. Another piece of text where I think this same idea of remembering the dead can be found, is in an article from The Washington Post, that describes how a 98 year old Holocaust survivor is telling her stories about her experiences and remembering the Holocaust. This article by the Wall Street Journal focuses on Lily Ebert, a survivor of the Holocaust, and how she has created a massive following on Tik Tok by telling “people what had happened there and, in doing so, changed the world.” Similarly to Elie, Lily also knows how crucial it is to remember the Holocaust and all of the

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