Government is a particular system used for controlling a country and maintaining its peace. Indifference is having no particular interest in something. Many people are indifferent about government but never seem to realize that being indifferent about government is dangerous. Its is dangerous to be indifferent about government because someone can come in and take the people's power and take it into their own hands. In the “Anonymous Girl” diary people get deported and sent to concentration camps to be killed because people didn't do anything to try to prevent them. In “Anonymous Girl” the girl says “I'm very upset about the whole situation because how can you be indifferent when people you know are getting deported” (Zapruder 230). This quote shows how people were getting deported and sent to concentration camps to be killed.It also shows that the indifference of people mainly caused …show more content…
This quote shows the danger of being indifferent because they saw that the other animals were being taken away and they didn't do anything to prevent the terrible things from taking away the other animals. It shows how the terrible things had the power in their own hands and they did whatever they wanted with it because none of the animals would do anything about it. “The Perils of Indifference” shows the dangers of being indifferent as well. “The Perils of Indifference shows the dangers of indifference because it shows what indifferent causes.“Indifference has caused a dark shadow over humanity: two world wars, many civil wars, the senseless assassinations, and the countless bloodbaths”. This quote shows that being indifferent causes many horrible things around the world like world wars and civil wars. It shows how if you don't care and you let the government have all of the power the government can do whatever they want with that
Writer, Elie Wiesel in his metaphorical speech “The perils of Indifference” argues that the future will never know the agony of the Holocaust and they will never understand the tragedy of the horrific terror in Germany. Wiesel wants people to not let this happen but at the time many modern genocides that are occurring and people shouldn’t be focused on just the Holocaust, they should focus on making this world a better place; moreover, Wiesel expresses his thoughts about all the genocides that has happen throughout the years. He develops his message through in an horrifying event that took place 54 years ago the day “ The perils of Indifference” was published. Wiesel illustrates the indifferences of good vs evil. He develops this message
He was finally free, no joy filled his heart but abandonment was drowning it. How dangerous is indifference to humankind as it pertains to suffering and the need for conscience understanding when people are faced with unjust behaviors? Elie Wiesel is an award winning author and novelist who has endured and survived hardships. One of the darkest times in history, a massacre of over six million Jews, the Holocaust and Hitler himself. After the Holocaust he went on and wrote the internationally acclaimed memoir “Night,” in which he spoke out against persecution and injustice across the world. In the compassionate yet pleading speech, ¨Perils of Indifference,¨ Elie Wiesel analyzes the injustices that himself and others endured during the twentieth century, as well as the hellish acts of the Holocaust through effective rhetorical choices.
When Elie Wiesel said that indefference is perilous, because he meant that it’s bad to not to care about something that is serious and, is very dangerous. He states very clearly is his speech that “ indifference is always the friend of the enemy, for it benefits the aggressor -- never his victim, whose pain is magnified when he or she feels forgotten”(paragraph 9). This means, that indifference is always the enemys favorite thing because, if no one cares then the enemy of the situation will always get away with what he is doing and, no one will try to stop him and that it makes the victim of the enemy forgotten becuase no one cares about there pain or suffering. He goes on to explain that, “Rooted in our tradition, some of us felt that to be abandoned by humanity then was not the ultimate”(paragraph 7). They felt abandoned by other humans, because people showed no care about what was
The Perils of Indifference speech by Elie Wiesel is one that is well crafted and that sends a strong message to the audience. Wiesel, a survivor of the Holocaust, addresses the issues of the 20th century in his speech while at the same time explaining the dangers of indifference. Wiesel’s appeals to his audience, as well as his strong message and arguments are what make this speech so effective.
He did this with the main point of his speech centering on how dangerous indifference can be to humankind.
Elie Wiesel has given the listener a wonderful opportunity to feel the intense movement of his speech, “The Perils of Indifference”. His speech is centered around the need for vigilance in the face of evil. Throughout this speech, with which he moved so many, he shared his experience with being sent to Buchenwald, a concentration camp, the treacherous conditions in which they were living, and the way that indifference has separated human beings. He explained, that through anger and hatred a great poem or symphony can be written, because “One does something special for the sake of humanity because one is angry at the injustice that one witnesses.” (Wiesel, 1999/16, p. 78). The three strategies that will be explored throughout this analysis are ethos, logos, and pathos.
Elie Wiesel questions and asks that even though people see photos, are aware and feel empathy for what is what is occurring around the world, why don’t they just do something? “Does it mean that we have learned from the past? Does it mean that society has changed? Has the human being become less indifferent and more human? Have we really learned from our experiences” (Perils of Indifference)? Though that the holocaust has supposedly taught the world the responsibility of prevent, have we all really learned that? He also wanted to convey that indifference is worse than any other feeling such as hate. “Yet, for the person who is indifferent, his or her neighbor are of no consequence. And, therefore, their lives are meaningless. Their hidden or even visible anguish is of no interest. Indifference reduces the other to an abstraction” (Perils of Indifference). Indifference is when solicitude is missing which indicates that there is a lack of awareness. Elie believes indifference is worse than hate because it implies that someone’s suffering isn’t worth rumination and consideration. The inhumanity that was put upon the Jews could have been stopped if people cared enough to take action against the Germans. Both messages are relevant and matter because they
“The Perils of Indifference” by Elie Wiesel, explains the true and utter horror of indifference. There is a clear emphasis on the morality exhibited in the act as well as the disappointment in the US government’s ability to respond to such a horrible act. It is obvious that Wiesel establishes tones of morality, condescendingness, and caution through diction, imagery, as well as syntax used in the speech. Although Wiesel describes how indifference has a massive effect on the victims even though by the very nature, bystanders do nothing. Indifference itself shows lack of regard for those in need and that can be perceived as morally lacking, which Wiesel condemns in the highest degree.
“Indifference elicits no response. Indifference is not a response. Indifference is not a beginning; it is an end.” (American Rhetoric). This is a sentiment that Elie Wiesel pushes throughout his speech, The Perils of Indifference. Elie Wiesel was a Romanian born, Jewish writer, and was a survivor of the holocaust (Berger). In his speech, The Perils of Indifference, he discusses how indifference has hurt him, and everyone throughout the world. In this speech Wiesel uses appeals to pathos to make his argument effective. Examples are scattered across the speech to make it more appealing, and provide real world context for what he is arguing about. The last of the rhetorical choices the speaker makes is definition, in this speech Wiesel defines indifference, and uses this definition to prove why indifference hurts people. In Elie Wiesel’s speech, The Perils of Indifference, he argues that indifference hurts people, and his argument is effective by using various rhetorical choices.
The Holocaust was a massacre of over six million Jews that occurred during the Nazi Regime that has been regarded as one of the most significant events in history. However, multiple forms of media such as literary works and films have incorporated this horrid event into a lesson about an aspect far more common and greater in today’s society, indifference. Indifference is literally “the lack of interest, concern, or sympathy towards someone or something” (Holocaust). Night, by Elie Wiesel, is an excellent example of a literary work that depicts the theme of indifference through the main character, Eliezer. Night is not only a nonfiction novel about the Holocaust, but is written by a Jewish boy who was in an actual concentration camp. In
Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel, in the speech “Perils of Indifference”, calls out the American government for being indifferent in an important time in world history. He claims that indifference is a very horrible thing and bad things have come from. He supports his claim by first explaining his childhood, then he goes on to talk about what it means to him, next explains the power it can have and finally explains the consequences that can come from it. His purpose is to educate his audience about indifference in hope of preventing indifference to continue in the future generations in order to accomplish his purpose for the speech. He establishes a calm tone for his audience.
The Holocaust is widely known as one of the most horrendous and disturbing events in history that the world has seen; over six million lives were lost, in fact the total number of deceased during the Holocaust has never been determined. The footage of concentration camps and gas chambers left the world in utter shock, but photos and retellings of the events cannot compare to being a victim of the Holocaust and living through the horror that the rest of the world regarded in the safety of their homes. Elie Wiesel recognized the indifference that the
Indifference is not a valid response to the suffering of people. “The Night of Broken Glass,“ also referred to as Kristallnacht occurred on the streets of Germany. Where hundreds of Jewish shops had been destroyed, synagogues were burned and thousands of people were put into concentration camps. The Jews possessions were also taken and many were beaten and murdered. The Germans revenge for trying to eliminate the Jews was strictly influenced by ignorance. If the German people had prevented the Jews from suffering than the events of the Holocaust would have been different. As Wiesel States, “Because of indifference, one dies before one actually dies”(30). Demonstrates the terrifying reality of what emotions can represent. Once someone has
This quote shows that animals have no choice but to eat their own species. One could imagine animal species eating others, it shows oppression towards these creatures. This passage could also symbolize that there is no hope for citizens living with a dictator in power. The government controls society which causes animals with no food. Animals have to find a way to live. “... and he ruled the country with brutality.”(All 1) Dictators only want wealth, and in order to get that they need to have power. “Brutality” displays diction because it comes from the word brutal, which means savagely violent. “Country” would explain the idea of rulers today controlling a country instead of just a small town in Animal Farm.
From the years 1939 to 1945, the world was going through many negative changes. The Nazis started WWII ,which negatively affected the lives of people all around the world. The Jews were especially threatened by the Nazis as they had intent to exterminate the entire race. Many fled, many were captured, and many hid from the Nazis, but despite their efforts, not many survived. The people unfortunate enough were sent to labor camps which in most situations, they died either from starvation, illness, or being sentenced to death. In the play “The Diary of Anne Frank” a group of people try to hide from the Nazis and are successful for quite some time, but being enclosed in one building with the same people for years slowly broke their sanity.