Night Elie Wiesel Research Paper

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Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor, overcame his experiences as a teen in concentration camps and became a human rights activist over the course of his life. Before becoming a well known human rights activist, Wiesel was deported with his family when he was fifteen by Nazis. His family was separated upon their arrival at the concentration camp; later, his mother and younger sister passed away while his older sister survived. Elie and his father were then transported to Buchenwald where his father died right before the camp became liberated, making Elie Wiesel the only Holocaust survivor of his family. Elie Wiesel is referred to as “messenger of the dead amongst the living” because he speaks for the souls lost in the Holocaust and provides hindsight …show more content…

After the camp became liberated, he went off to study in Paris and became a journalist who wrote of his experiences in concentration camps. As a result of Wiesel’s experience, he wrote many pieces and novels, including his most famous novel “Night”. “Only in Night does Wiesel speak about the Holocaust directly. Throughout his other works, the Holocaust looms as the shadow, the central but unspoken mystery in the life of his protagonists” (Encyclopedia of the World). In his most famous novel “Night” is where he becomes a “messenger of the dead amongst the living”, because he speaks for all the lives lost in the Holocaust and tells his experience as a young male in concentration camps. Wiesel’s efforts to become educated allowed him to become extremely literate and cause his writing to make people feel similar to how he felt while living through those experiences as a young Jewish boy who had to live through the Holocaust. Wiesel fought to educate himself to make sure to successfully expose the truths of the Holocaust while also making sure the world gets to hear his

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