Elie Wiesel
Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel (1928-2016) authored 57 books. He was a Nobel Peace Prize winner and recipient of numerous other awards including the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
After his time in concentration camps, he received asylum in France where he completed his education. His career included being a journalist and later a professor of Humanities at Boston University. His most important work, however, was as an activist and defender of human rights.
The Night Trilogy Contains:
- “Night” – a memoir of Wiesel’s year as a prisoner in Auschwitz and Buchenwald
- “Dawn” – a novel about the Jewish resistance in Palestine during English rule
- “Day” – a novel about a Holocaust survivor’s obsession with death
The novels, “Dawn” and “Day” were captivating. They each reflected the permanent pain and disability from being a prisoner during the Holocaust. There are fragments which one knows are true to Wiesel’s personal anguish.
“Night” was heartbreaking as the young Elie tells of the horrors of daily life in the concentration camps. His mother and younger sister were killed. His father died of starvation while in captivity during a brutal winter.
Originally a 900-page book entitled “And The World Remained Silent,” it was written in Yiddish then translated in this abridged version to English and thirty other languages.
The inhumanities suffered by Wiesel and other prisoners are difficult to accept but should be read by everyone lucky enough to live free.
“We must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.” Elie Wiesel
Such wise words from the voice of experience. It also reminded me of what John McCain endured in his 5 years in a box in Vietnam. There is such sadness when I think of human beings being so cruel and inhuman to all living creatures. We KNOW better, but our need to punish and dominate causes reason to take flight. Elie Wiesel did not let his torture define him, and we are benefiting today because he shared his life and resurrection with us. Victory is what happens when we use our experiences to help better mankind. His journey is still today lighting the way.
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Thanks for the information. We certainly need to be reminded of what can happen when we aren’t vigilant.
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