The Perils Of Indifference Essay

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    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

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    Holocaust Survivor, Elie Wiesel, in his speech, “The Perils of Indifference” (1999), advises that having an apathetic attitude to a situation is dangerous a society in need of help. He supports his claim by gaining credibility from his audience and uses imagery to help, then addresses briefly about his past life and an example of when indifference occurred, and finally, throws everything that transpired in the past and hints what we can do differently in the future. Wiesel’s purpose is to urge the

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    Wiesel’s,“The Perils of Indifference” , he aims a tone of guilt towards the audience by using diction, imagery, and details. Elie uses repetition and uses words that greatly impact mood upon the audience to specify the tone. The words are symbolic towards the tone of guilt. The author also displays the use of facts to indicate his point of view. Elie Wiesel's use of diction indicates the tone of guilt that he aims at the audience. Elie Wiesel first uses the word “indifference” when saying, “So

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    The use of Ethos by both Wiesel in “The Perils of Indifference” and by Atwood in “Footnote to The Amnesty Report on Torture” allows the reader to have a sense of trust in the speaker. Wiesel says “What is indifference? Etymologically, the word means ‘no difference.’” Wiesel lets the audience know that the subject of his speech will relate to the topic of indifference and that he himself is qualified to speak upon it. This helps give him credibility because he is showing his interest in the topic

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    Eliezer Wiesel stresses the fact that, “Action is the only remedy to indifference: the most insidious danger of all” (Reilly). As a young boy who went through the most horrific of experiences, Wiesel, in his speech The Perils of Indifference, discusses how the events of his past pale in comparison to a major issue taking hold in not only the United States, but also the world: indifference, because while others suffered, the rest stayed stagnant, and that, to him, showcased a pressing problem. Therefore

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    Perils of Indifference 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

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    Writer and Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel in his influential speech “The Perils of Indifference” claims that indifference is a problem and not feeling is what we should avoid. He develops his message through details of his experience living during the holocaust. Specifically, paragraph 9 talks about how people there had lost who they were during their time there.Finally, he talks about other people during some events. Wiesel’s purpose is to inform people in order to keep them from being indifferent

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    Wiesel in his powerful speech, The Perils of Indifference, claims that the greater evils that lay within indifference are far worse than what any anger or hatred could ever accomplish. He develops his message by highlighting past tragedies and where he holds indifference. The meaning of the word as well as where it ranks among other words of war. Wiesel explains that “to be indifferent to that suffering is what makes the human being inhuman.” and that “Indifference is not a beginning, it is an end”

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    In the speech, “Perils of Indifference,” Elie Wiesel, the author of Night, conveys his message that indifference entices inhumanity as a lack of acknowledgement to a person’s suffering is advantageous to an assailant and “elicits no response” (3). Therefore, the individual with a sense of indifference is a determining factor in others’ distress because without their involvement, the victim will never be assisted. Sentiments of anger and hatred possess the ability to endorse positive conclusions;

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    spoke the famous “ The Perils of Indifference” speech in April 1999, at the White House. Wiesel has a strong opinion that having a lack of interest or sympathy is the worst state of mind to have. With many people becoming detached in today's society Wiesel fights to express how indifference can ruin humanity by using rhetorical questioning, an analogy, and ethos to persuade his readers and/or listeners. Elie Wiesel begins his speech with stating his understanding that indifference becomes a normal state

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