Wiesel mentions the camps and the Holocaust, which may indicate that his life was like darkness and night at the time, and I think other survivors feel the same way
Consistency and Courage. At the heart of this speech is Wiesel's claim that indifference is more dangerous than hatred. He considers indifference a sin. He takes us back to the camp and, as he talks to his fellow inmates, makes us believe that if people knew what was going on they would intervene.
Nearly all of his family were killed while being held and abused by the Nazis. Wiesel emphasized the dangers of indifference in his 1999 White House speech, emphasizing the dangers of indifference. During his imprisonment, he and his peers felt abandoned and forgotten. He gave this impassioned speech to Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate Ellie Wiesel in his East Room of the White House on April 12, 1999.
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