Test Question: Discuss the idea that the author of the text suggests in the selected text about the interaction of fear and foresight when individuals change their lives.
Fear is a "painful emotion caused by impending danger" (Webster's dictionary). Fear is also the best way to compromise the foresight of those who cause decisions of corruption. To achieve this level of understanding to make effective decisions, you must fully understand yourself so that you can block emotions and think reasonably. Looking back on the experience of the Holocaust, there is a tendency to appear when there is no hope or belief in the novel "even" by an award-winning writer Ely Wiesel. In this novel, about her experience during the war, Erie was thrown into a concentration camp, where he whipled, beaten, exhausted, hungry, deprived, lost faith, and eventually lost the whole family. Because he is Jewish
Ellie living in the camp eventually began to fear death. And it brought a slow deterioration of his relationship with his father. This happens because his own fragile human beings succumb to the need for survival. Without an optimistic view of your life, this strong fear emerges, leaving a corrupt, perspective of atmosphere that ends life and changes the decisions people will regret. After being put in the slums, Ellie still found his strength as he kept his faith and his family's unity. Erie's family began to dissipate when he first came to the labor camp, but it is clear that his faith is yet intact at this point. After seeing other friends and acquaintances still alive, his sister and mother were taken away from him, and he also said "at camp (Wiesel 33)" I thank God! " It was. There is still unity here, and there is still a belief in keeping everyone's choices and opinions about the future.