Comparing Wiesel's Tuesdays With Morrie And Night

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Alan Paton once said, “There is only one way in which one can endure man’s inhumanity to man and that is to try, in one’s own life, to exemplify man’s humanity to man.” When one were to read this quote, he would think that it means that the only way to get rid of inhumanity in the world is for everyone to show extreme amounts of humanity to even out all of the other evilness. In Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom and Night by Elie Wiesel, the authors both speak of a truer meaning of the word humanity. Night is a book about a young boy experiencing all kinds of inhumanity. It is a man recounting the story of a boy who is experiencing one of the most evil things that the peoples of the world have experienced, the Holocaust. He regards his …show more content…

Wiesel at one point, loses all of his faith in humanity and it’s ability to be kind to one another. He describes one scene where a son kills a father over a simple slice of bread (Wiesel 101-102). All of these …show more content…

Tuesdays with Morrie is an uplifting book about humanity, the goodness in the world. It is about an elderly man, who is aware of the fact that he is dying, who is trying to live the best life he possibly can. This book mainly revolves around the idea of humanity, instead of inhumanity. At one point in the novel, Morrie Schwartz states, “The most important thing in life is to learn to give out love, and to let it come in,” (Albom 52). When one reads this he might take away the idea that Schwartz means to love, never hate; he is not wrong when he says this, people should be kind, or humane, to each other always. That is a central theme in this novel, love. Morrie Schwartz also states at one point that people might not think they deserve love, but they do. A man, or woman, might not want to let love in so he will not become soft, but love makes him soft and love is so worth it (Albom 52). Morrie Schwartz likes to pull things from all kinds of faith to help him make sense of the world, at one point he references the Buddhist belief that every morning there is a bird on your shoulder that you ask if you are going to die and the bird will answer either yes or no (Albom 85). So Morrie Schwartz never loses his faith, he uses anecdotes from all different faiths to try and make sense of the world. Upkeep of faith is something that does not happen in Night simply because the lack

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