The Sunflower By Simon Wiesenthal

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The book “The Sunflower” is available. On the Possibilities and Limits of Forgiveness”, by Simon Wiesenthal, is about one of the toughest times being in a Nazi concentration camp. This book is about the start of the turning point in the war, and the prisoners were living in really harsh conditions. As well in this book the main character, Simon, was being asked for forgiveness by an SS Soldier named Karl who is on his death bed but Simon just stood still and didn’t know what to say, driving him down the road of forgiveness. Throughout the book, there are many moral predicaments on whether Simon should forgive the dying soldier, through controversies of justice, redemption, and responsibility, through the side that’s more morally correct there …show more content…

Dentonations followed one after another. My God!’ “(Wiesenthal pg 42). After hearing this horrific story, Simon just showed silence, which gives Karl time to think about his accountability for the actions of mass murder. This is giving silent justice because Simon rather shows silence then forgiveness. Simon’s turndown of this soldier’s forgiveness request also holds the memory of everyone lost in that atrocity, and as well throughout the whole war, giving the justice through his moral points that holds true. Another moral predicament that was controversial throughout the book was the redemption of the SS Soldier for his crimes. As Simon stayed silent throughout the book, this was a showing of redemption for the Nazi’s that have died, as well as still being open minded as those who have endured this massacre may not agree with him granting Karl forgiveness for what he has done. An example of this is when Karl was dying and was asking for forgiveness, but during which Simon was thinking, “I said nothing. The truth is that on his battlefield he has also ‘fought’ against defenseless men, women, children, and the

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