Survivors of the Erie-Wiesel Holocaust In the war in Europe in 1939, I can not imagine or believe that Adolf Hitler will immediately bring horror to Jewish lives. Hitler borrowed from the pursuit of his paranoia and the Nazi army of the world to pick out the reasons of the Jewish people in Germany and began to implement his plan to destroy parts of mankind. In addition to persecuting the Jews in Germany, Hitler also persecuted against Jews such as Poland and other European countries, Transylvania, Eli Wiesel, a massacre survivor.
"Final solution", "Nazi's policy to kill European Jews" (Introduction to the Holocaust). "Night" is a memoir written by Ellie Wiesel of the survival of the massacre. The night of Elie Wiesel explains the relationship between father and son, and the change in loyalty due to inhuman acts. At the beginning of the memoirs, the relationship between Erie Wiesel and his father was not very intimate. In 1941, at the age of 13, Elie Wiesel was very religious and was studying Talmud every day. He asked if his father could find someone.
Speaker Elie Wiesel is the winner of the Nobel Prize at the Holocaust Survivor. He experienced personal injustice and pain during the Holocaust. In 1944, in his teens, Wiesel and his family were expelled from the Nazis and forcibly repatriated to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. Wessel remembers slavery, starvation, and the face of strict discipline. • Wessel uses logic to show that 20th century unfairness will be tried during the new century. "These failures brought a shadow to humanity: two world wars, numerous civil wars, a chain of meaningless assassinations ... massacre in Cambodia, Nigeria, India, and Pakistan ... with inhuman acts of Gurug and Tragedy of Hiroshima ... Because it is very violent, indifference.
These are Elie Wiesel's "indifferent dangers" - the beginnings of Holocaust survivors, writers, philosophers and intellectuals. Of course there are also charismatic speakers such as Winston Churchill, Vladimir Lenin, Adolf Hitler, Charles de Gaulle and famous speeches like Martin Luther King's "I have a dream". Or, the last sentence of Charles I will never forget what he was before he was executed. But as historian Simon Sabag Montefiore said in the preface to the best-selling book "Speech to change the world": ethical rigor and anger of justice All decent civilizations Essence: Elie Wiesel's 2000 speech on "danger of indifference"