The Perils Of Indifference Essay

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    ” The speech, “The Perils of Indifference” by Elie Wiesel, given on April 12, 1999, contains many rhetorical devices. The speaker, Elie Wiesel, born in 1928 in Romania, is a Holocaust survivor and a Nobel Laureate who met suffering and torture firsthand when he was taken to Aushwitz concentration camp as a teenager. Throughout the speech, Wiesel recalls his enslavement and hunger at Aushwitz to emphasize the purpose that the audience

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    Social injustice is caused by inequalities in the world. What's an inequality you ask? Inequality is when a person or group of people are treated differently, in a bad way, because of a quality they possess whether it be race, religion, where they're from, etc. For example, segregation is an inequality that was caused by people believing people of white race are purer than those of other races. These inequalities grow and become a big problem and are called social injustices. How can social injustice

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    How does society form? How does society fall apart? In the short story, ‘Easter, 1916’ by William Butler Yeats, he writes about the Irish Republic that was founded in 1916 on Easter. In another short story called ‘The Perils of Indifference’ by Elie Wiesel, he writes that being indifferent can be just as bad as the person who is hurting the other. In the short story, ‘Easter, 1916’, the author writes it to explain how the Irish Republic was founded and how it was a terrible beauty born. He says

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    delivered a speech to government officials at the White House the year before the new millennia. His speech “The Perils of Indifference” calls on his own personal experience in the Jewish Concentration Camps and other historical events to show the harm feeling indifferent can cause to society. Wiesel succeeded in invoking empathy and understanding in his audience by describing indifference, using everyday examples that they can relate to, expressing historical knowledge, and offering a melancholic

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    The Perils of Indifference What is it that separates us from animals? Is it our intelligence? Our anatomy? Or is there something more, deep inside each of us that distinguishes humanity from brute nature? To speaker Elie Wiesel, caring for others is what makes humans exhibit humanity. On April 12, 1999, Elie Wiesel delivered his speech called “The Perils of Indifference” before President Clinton and the entirety of Congress. Wiesel’s speech focuses on the atrocities that had occurred in the past

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    Indifference, lacking the care or motivation to make a change in the world, showing no interest or concern. Indifference can be almost like a monster that slowly takes over a life and how a person feels about it. It overpowers a person’s brain, causing it to have a “whatever” mindset instead of an ethical one like it should have. Instead of either being proud of the important things or fighting against the terrible ones, it would just be a “who cares” or a shrug of the shoulders about anything and

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    “He was finally free, but there was no joy in his heart. He thought there never would be again”. This quote stated by Elie Wiesel from his speech, “The Perils of Indifference”, refers to the day Elie Wiesel got liberated from the Holocaust when he was young. The Holocaust was just one of the many horrific tragedies that occurred during that century. In hopes of changing the future for the better, Wiesel decides to deliver a speech about helping the victims of injustice. He gives this speech intended

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    significant speech, “The Perils of Indifference,” clearly states that indifference is very dangerous to humanity and shall be put to an end. He develops his message through emphasizing the cruel results of indifference. For example, Wiesel explains how a person’s life feels “meaningless” when their neighbor is indifferent. It is indifference that can “reduce the other to an abstraction” (par 8). The author describes what indifference means to him as well. In particular, indifference is “more dangerous

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    Rhetoric Observed in The Perils of Indifference Elie Wiesel, distinguished author and Holocaust survivor, spoke of his experience at the Millennium event in 1999. This event was hosted by President Clinton where Wiesel spoke about his experience in the Holocaust to commemorate the closing Millennium. Aside from this great honor, Elie Wiesel worked at Boston University for some time and acquired many medals of recognition such as The United States Congressional Medal as well as starting The Elie

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    speech “The Perils of Indifference,” claims that indifference is the root of all evil and inhumanity---all pain and all tragedy has resulted because of indifference. He supports his claim by highlighting the reason for “World Wars,” “Civil Wars,” “Assassinations,” “Bloodbaths,” and “Tragedy---” indifference (Wiesel par. 5) . Specifically, Wiesel uses imagery to paint an image of what the innocent victims of indifference experience. The poor “children [that] perish” because of the indifference in a man’s

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