Elie Wiesel was born in Sighet in 1928 and is now part of Romania. During World War II, he and his family and other Jews were forcibly repatriated to the German concentration camp where his parents and sisters were murdered. Vieser and his two sisters survived. In 1945, he was taken to Paris by advancing Allied troops from Buchenwald, where he studied and worked as a journalist at Sorbonne.
In 1958 he published his first book, "A Memoir of his Experience in a concentration camp". Since then, he has written about 31 books, some of which are based on these events. In many of his lectures, Wessel has been worried about other groups that have been persecuted and killed for Jewish, religious, racial, ethnic origins. He is dull about the plight of Soviet Jews, Ethiopian Jews, and today's Israeli state.
Wessel settled in New York and is an American citizen now. He served as a visiting researcher at Yale University and a professor emeritus at the City University of New York, and since 1976 he has worked as a professor of humanities in Boston University, Professor Andrew W. Mellon, "Memory Literature". Wiesel served as chairman of the American Holocaust Commemorative Committee from 1980 to 1986, and serves numerous boards and advisory committees.
This autobiography / biography won a prize and was later posted on the Les Prix Nobel Prize / Nobel Prize / Nobel Prize series. Sometimes this information is updated according to the appendix submitted by laurel.
Erie · S, Night's Legacy: Erie-Wiesel University of Literature. New York State University Albany, 1982
This autobiography / biography was written with an award and first published in the Les Prix Nobel series. It was edited and re-published at the Nobel Lecture later. To refer to this document, always mention the source as above
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