The Revolution Of Night By Ellie Wiesel

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The Revolution of Night The writing of Night by Ellie Wiesel was an influential piece of literature that helped raise global awareness and equality, lack of tolerance and governmental fundamentals. Due to the severity and astronomical amounts of lives lost during the Holocaust, it was imperative Elie Wiesel share his testimony for everyone living person in the world to see and sympathize the effects of the Holocaust and to ensure to the world that there would never be a repeat of this horrific event. With that being said, Racism can be analyzed through three specific scopes. One being how global governments are ran, societal lack of tolerance on racsim/anti-semitism and lastly, how Ellie Wiesels book changed the world as a whole. …show more content…

According to Jon Cox, who wrote Racial Ideology, Imperialism, and Nazi Genocide "The Nazis' ultimate ambition was unprecedented in its radicalism: to forge "an ideal future world, without 'lesser races,' without the sick, and without those who they decreed had no place in the 'national community". The Germans believed that only people of the Aryan race were pure. Meaning, basically if they weren't form German decent and didn't have blue eyes and blonde hair they were considered trash. The Germans theory became so sickening that they actually started to believe that what they were doing was morally correct or a "favor to society". According to the article EXTRAORDINARY EVIL NEW LOOK AT THE HOLOCAUST FINDS THE ANSWER TO `WHY?' BURIED DEEP IN A NATION'S SOUL, Goldhagen writes, "were assenting mass executioners, men and women who, true to their own eliminationist anti-Semitic beliefs, faithful to their cultural anti-Semitic credo, considered the slaughter to be just." This statement particularly hits home because after reading Night, I know the pain, trauma and anger Elie felt as he vividly described the events that occurred, and for the Nazis to act like it was no big deal or morally correct is truly sickening. Because of the Germans deep hatred for Jews, they initially ostracized them from society by placing them in "Ghettos". The use of the ghettos were to segregate the Jews into small communities and essentially get rid of them u …show more content…

Published in 1955, just 10 years after suffering from a world atrocity, Elle wrote a book that changed the lives of many. He shares his real life accounts of the endless torture and persecution of his faith that seems almost unfathomable for the typical human. However, through faith Elie survives the Holocaust and writes about his experiences. As a testament to his world changing book, Ellie gave a speech in Santa Barbra. According to Gary Libman, author of Lest We Forget, Elie Wiesel Remembers Holocaust Survivor Speaks Out against Arms Race,a young women said " that you spoke here last time and and what you said inspired me more than anything I've ever heard." People see Elie as a spiritual guide. They saw him as someone who speaks with a genuine tone, calmness and a Jewish scholar. The impact Elie made on many Americans through the reading of his book will forever be unsurpassed. Wiesels influence did not stop there. In January of 1985, Wiesel felt as if refuges in Tuscon had felt oppressed. Elie then held a press conference as is described by Mark Chimel, author of The political varieties of sacred rememberance: Elie Wiesel and U.S. foreign policy, said the following, "Wiesel began his lecture with his immediate identification with the refugees, for he, too, had once been a refugee. He described his own fear at customs proceedings and encounters with policemen, because of his own traumatic stateless

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