Elie Wiesel Thesis

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Eliezer “Elie” Wiesel was a Holocaust survivor, infamous author, and political activist, born on September 30, 1928 into a Jewish family in Sighet, Romania right before the beginning of the Nazi-Era. Living in Germany in 1940 was unfavorable to everyone but especially the Jewish population. While the Aryan and non-Jewish citizens of Germany lived a reasonably comfortable lifestyle during the early stages of war. However that was not the case for the Jews, living in small ghettos in German cities and reduced job opportunities are just a few of the ways oppression was manifested against the Jews in the beginning of World War II. The discrimination only worsened as the war intensified. Jews who were fit to work were forced to do compulsory labor, …show more content…

One of his fellow colleges recommended that Wiesel write a memoir about his time in the concentration camps, which he did in 1956. This memoir rapidly gained fame and was eventually sold in many different languages around the globe. “Wiesel moved to New York in 1955 and became a U.S. citizen in 1963. He met Marion Rose, an Austrian Holocaust survivor, in New York, and they married in Jerusalem in 1969. Wiesel went on to write many books, including the novels Town of Luck (1962), The Gates of the Forest (1966) and The Oath (1973), and such nonfiction works as Souls on Fire: Portraits and Legends of Hasidic Masters (1982) and the memoir All Rivers Run to the Sea (1995). Wiesel also became a revered international activist, orator and figure of peace over the years, speaking out against injustices perpetrated in an array of countries, including South Africa, Bosnia, Cambodia and Rwanda. In 1978, Wiesel was appointed chair of the President's Commission on the Holocaust by President Jimmy Carter. He was honored across the world with a number of awards, including the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom and the French Legion of Honor's Grand Croix.Teaching was another of Wiesel's passion, and he was appointed in the mid-1970s as Boston University's Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities. He also taught Judaic studies at the City University of New York, and served as a visiting scholar at Yale. Wiesel won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986,” this quote contains a lot of information about Wiesel, but is stating how vastly accomplished he was in his life after the Holocaust and moving to

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