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FREE ESSAY ON DAWN ELIE WIESEL

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Elie Wiesel’s “Night”
This paper reviews Elie Wiesel’s “Night”, an accounting of his later childhood in Hungary and how he and his family ended up transported to German concentration camps. -- 1,420 words;

Elie Wiesel's "Night"
An analysis of Elie Wiesel's book, "Night", contrasting Elie and his father. -- 1,016 words; MLA

Elie Wiesel's "Night"
This paper is a critique of Elie Wiesel's Holocaust "fiction" "Night". -- 1,010 words; MLA

Elie Wiesel Memoirs
A critical review of Elie Wiesel's memoirs "All Rivers Run to the Sea". -- 2,178 words; MLA

Elie Wiesel's "Night"
A look at the deconstruction of Elie Wiesel in his autobiographical book "Night". -- 1,383 words;

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DAWN ELIE WIESEL

Elie Wiesel's, Dawn
Elie Wiesel was only fifteen when German troops deported him and his family from their
home in Romania to the concentration camp, Auschwitz. His father, mother and younger
sister all died in result to the hands of the Nazis. The young boy survived forced labor,
forced marches, starvation, disease, beatings and torture to become a world-renowned
writer, teacher and spokesmen for the oppressed peoples of the earth. He is best known as
the most eloquent witness to the great catastrophe to which he was the first to give the
name "Holocaust."
Wiesel refuses to allow himself or his readers to forget the Holocaust because, as a
survivor, he has assumed the role of messenger. It is his duty to witness as a "messenger
of the dead among the living," (Harry James Cargas, In Conversation with Elie Wiesel) and
to prevent the evil of the victims destruction from being increased by being forgotten.
Although he does not continue to retell the tales of the dead only to make life miserable
for the living, or even to insure that such an atrocity will not happen again. Rather,
Elie Wiesel is motivated by a need to wrestle theologically with the Holocaust. 
The reality of the annihilation of six million Jews presents a seemingly insurmountable
obstacle to further theological thought: how is it possible to believe in God after what
happened? The sum of Wiesel's work is a passionate effort to break through this barrier
to new understanding and faith. It is to his credit that he is unwilling to retreat into
easy atheism, just as he refuses to bury his head in the sand of optimistic faith. What
Wiesel calls for is a fierce, defiant struggle with the Holocaust.


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