Elie Wiesel: The Impact Of Indifference?

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The Impact of Indifference Elie Wiesel once stated that “More dangerous than anger and hatred is indifference. Indifference is not a beginning; it is an end-and it is always the friend of the enemy.” Wiesel was a survivor of a German concentration camp called Buchenwald during the Holocaust and later dedicated his life to groups suffering from persecution for their beliefs and discrimination against their national origin. He had first hand experienced of the horrors that anger and hatred are capable of, yet still believed that indifference was worse. This is because indifference shows no emotion, fails to take action against existing anger and hatred, and cannot be used to promote growth within the world. The lack of emotion that defines indifference desensitizes people. …show more content…

It suffocates the very idea of growth and focuses on maintaining a fixed mindset. “A growth mindset does not require you to improve on everything around you - having a growth mindset means that you love learning, taking on challenges, sticking to them and feeling the satisfaction and thrill of improving.” (France). This is where indifference becomes the end because people no longer want to improve and genuinely make a change. Instead, individuals choose to passively stand by. I have struggled to find the line between moving on in life and tossing my issues aside for as long as I can remember. The difference lies when I let myself be emotional to heal and when I shut down to numb my problems. However, choosing to not feel emotion and failing to deal with the real issue at hand starts a dangerous cycle of apathy that can only be broken when the real issue eventually resurfaces. Continual denial of my problems has never helped me grow. Instead, it was a powerful force of destruction. This cycle of apathy is just one example of how indifference is the friend of the enemy and why indifference is always the

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