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Elie Wiesel’s literary memoir Night is a harrowing account of a Jewish teenager’s experiences in Nazi concentration camps during World War II. Structured around horrifying, semi-autobiographical events from Wiesel’s life, the first-person narrative explores the impact of those events on its protagonist, Eliezer, who loses both his ...
Night is a 1960 memoir by Elie Wiesel based on his Holocaust experiences with his father in the Nazi German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald in 1944–1945, toward the end of the Second World War in Europe.
Jul 2, 2016 · Many years after the war, he would write about his experiences surviving the German concentration camps with such harrowing detail that it would bring the realities of Auschwitz and...
Jul 3, 2016 · Introduced to an audience in the East Room of the White House by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, Wiesel mentioned, without drawing exact parallels to, the Holocaust, adding that indifference was...
Jul 12, 2016 · The book is an account of Wiesel's time in Auschwitz and Buchenwald and has sold an estimated 10 million copies. Wiesel helped set up the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1985 and was awarded...
Published in English in 1960, Elie Wiesel’s Night is an autobiographical account of his experience in the Nazi concentration camps of Auschwitz and Buchenwald from 1944-1945.
Night does not try to answer these questions; perhaps this lack of answers is one of the reasons that the story ends with the liberation of Buchenwald. The moral responsibility for remembering the Holocaust, and for confronting these difficult moral and theological questions, falls directly upon us, the readers.