The Perils Of Indifference By Elie Wiesel

678 Words2 Pages

“The Perils of Indifference” manages a very difficult topic of abandonment and inhumanity when the Jews and other people in the Holocaust were left to die without hope. “The Perils of Indifference” and Night both conquer the difficult idea of death both literally and metaphorically from the loss of hope and the victory of indifference. The speech given by Elie Wiesel more effectively projects the important idea of the dangers of indifference through the use of rhetorical questions that caused the reader to question the innocence and hope of themselves and the apparent “saviors” from the Holocaust. Both Night and “The Perils of Indifference” have strong voices on the topic of hopelessness, but “The Perils of Indifference” is able to relate this …show more content…

We are shown the as the reader or listener the true danger of submission, hopelessness, and indifference truly has, as it allows the Hitlers, S.S. guards, the pressures to win against silent victims and their bystanders. Wiesel says, “It is so much easier to look away from victims.” (“The Perils of Indifference”) this shows how indifference causes us to look away from the horrors and sadnesses of the world and become blind to the solutions and problems of the present. By submitting to indifference we lose our humanity, emotions, and beliefs, and we become pawns that are moved by a force that could be conquered if only we held onto our passion. Through Night, people are unable to know the true extent of hopelessness because you are only subjected to the hopelessness and unable to see the true difference from bright passion to bleak indifference. This tragic and truthful speech brought a feeling of anger and realisation to the audience from knowing, “We were indifferent to the suffering of millions.” and “How is one to explain their indifference?” (“The Perils of …show more content…

We are able to use this anger to construct a future where no human being will be the subject of indifference. Through “The Perils of Indifference”, the reader is able to see an overview that Night was completely lacking from the first person perspective. “The Perils of Indifference” lacks the in depth view of loss and bleakness that is created from hopelessness and indifference that Night successfully shows through many literary devices and a character that we are able to connect with on a personal level like the death of Juliek and his hope bringing object, his violin. Although it is very true that a reader is able to easily see the deadly changes that occur through the Holocaust in the memoir Night, the vast number of examples that are given through the thought provoking existential questions posed by “The Perils of Indifference”. These unique questions allow people to discover through deep and revealing thoughts how indifference has affected and corrupted the power countries and emotions in this unchanged world.

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