Elie Wiesel Imagery

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How can people overlook such a horrible event happening, and not do anything about it? This paper will follow a young man, Elie Wiesel, whose terrifying journey was carried on throughout the Holocaust. Wiesel uses imagery and vividly describes many of the horrific sights he saw at the camp when he was younger, to establish and describe the tones fear, shock, and gloom (darkness). Eliezer "Elie" Wiesel is a Holocaust survivor, award-winning novelist, journalist, and human rights activist, and a Nobel Prize laureate in World Peace (Jewish Virtual Library). On September 30, 1928, Elie Wiesel was born in Sighet, Transylvania. Transylvania is now known as part of Romania. In 1942, Wiesel would celebrate his bar mitzvah. He also continued studying …show more content…

According to Jewish Virtual Library, the Wiesels were some of the last Jews to be loaded into a cattle car by early June. The car contained eighty people in it. About four days after loading, the train stopped at Auschwitz. His mother and younger sister died soon after. Then Elie and his father were transported to Buchenwald. Elie later wrote in his book, "Life in the cattle cars was the death of my adolescence” (Jewish Virtual Library). At three years old, Wiesel began attending a Jewish school where he learned Hebrew, the Bible, and eventually Talmud. In 1947, he began to study French with a tutor. Wiesel soon enrolled in the Sorbonne University in 1948, where he studied psychology, literature, and philosophy. After the war, Elie Wiesel studied in Paris. He later became a journalist. In 1940, the Nazis turned Sighet over to Hungary. By 1942, the Hungarian government demanded that Jews were not have Hungarian citizenship. They were to be transferred to Poland and murdered by the Nazis. Elie was among the many jews transported to the camps. There, the Jews would be separated from their family and forced to work. All the children, sickly, and

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