Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Elie Wiesel: Discussing Indifference

Fisher - Elie Wiesel: Discussing Indifference
Night is a retelling of Eliezer Wiesel's journey as a 15 year old Jew living through the Holocaust. His survival allows for this retelling which has opened the eyes of so many individuals. It is a blessing that he survived, as he provides a first-hand witness to the atrocities that were committed during the Holocaust. His account, is one of many that is needed and necessary in order that we never forget what happened during that time. It is an account of human failure, struggle, and strife that should never be shelved nor forgotten. This is why Elie Wiesel is deserving of his Nobel Prize, he bears witness to a bloody, horrific past that every person should be   conscience of and held accountable for.

Night begins on the eve of the war reaching Elie's town of Sighet, toward the end of 1942. The people were warned of the war crimes being performed by the Nazi's in concentration camps by Moishe the Beadle, yet they ignored his pleas. For Elie, the ensuing journey through the ghettos and camps, being separated from his mother, and the death of his father, caused him to shut down. He became completely "indifferent" to his surroundings and walked the borders of reality, insanity, and death. It was not until two weeks after he was liberated that he was able to look in the mirror and greet a complete stranger that he would be forced to carry in his chest and in his eyes, until the day he died.

 What stands out in Wiesel's Nobel Price Acceptance Speech and in his speech for Clinton's Millennial Lectures is his description and awareness of indifference. He says during his Millennial speech,

"Indifference is always the friend of the enemy, for it benefits the aggressor -- never his victim, whose pain is magnified when he or she feels forgotten"


 Indifference works for the enemy, who is crime to humanity. By doing nothing, turning away, or simply rejecting these crimes we are in a sense helping the enemy. No man or woman should stand aside and allow for genocides like the Holocaust or mass starvation of the Kulaks by Stalin go unchecked. By doing nothing, the enemy has already won. Simply wasting one minute of time with our heads turned, allows for the waste of another life. And in that sense, every single life should be treasured; because one man/woman can make a difference, and Elie Wiesel is a perfect example.

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