The Unimaginable Experiences In Elie Wiesel's The Survivor

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For those who survived the unimaginable experiences from concentration camps have come out with extraordinary stories to tell. These survivors share their stories through abundant amounts of literature ranging from diaries, novels, and documentaries. Their testimonies allow us to know the truth and what really occurred behind closed doors; history was developed. The book called The Survivor by Terrence Des Pres describes stories of what men and women had to endure while being held in a Nazi concentration camp. The world to which “survivors speak is very much a part of their condition as witnesses. They speak for someone, but also to someone, and the response the evoke is integral to the act they perform” (Pres 41). Holocaust survivor Viktor E. Frankl describes a time where he would be laying in his bunk while overhearing another prisoner having a nightmare but wouldn’t wake them up because “he knew that no matter how bad the dream might be, the reality was worse” (75). …show more content…

For example Auschwitz concentration camp there was no relaxation or you would death. In some cases, prisoners were forced to death marches in the bitter cold without food or food, which resulted in people freezing to death or being shot if you couldn’t keep up. A “survivor can never be sure of success” (7) but staying alive became motivation for many. Another survivor named Elie Wiesel was held in Auschwitz concentration camp that received two types of advice from two different prisoners. The first prisoner was an older man who said, “We are all brothers, and we are all suffering the same fate. Help one another. It is the only way to survive” (97). The second inmate was some anonymous saying, “Don’t forget that you’re in a concentration camp. Here, there are no fathers, no brothers, no friends. Everyone lives and dies for himself alone”

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