EPISODE · Jul 18, 2016 · 29 MIN
Elie Wiesel: A Light in the Darkness
from What It Takes® · host Academy of Achievement
After World War II, when few survivors of the Holocaust were willing or able to describe what they’d been through, Elie Wiesel decided silence was not an option. Even if words could never adequately express the horrors, the world had to know what had happened. He wrote “Night,” and became the best-known witness to the Nazi atrocities, as well as winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. In this episode Elie Wiesel (who died on July 2, 2016) explores how it was possible for him to find hope after Auschwitz and Buchenwald, by defending the victims of hate and injustice around the world.Music in the episode is from KaraSquare.com, BenSound.com & Erik Satie.(c ) American Academy of Achievement 2016
What this episode covers
After World War II, when few survivors of the Holocaust were willing or able to describe what they’d been through, Elie Wiesel decided silence was not an option. Even if words could never adequately express the horrors, the world had to know what had happened. He wrote “Night," and became the best-known witness to the Nazi atrocities, as well as winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. In this episode Elie Wiesel (who died on July 2, 2016) explores how it was possible for him to find hope after Auschwitz and Buchenwald, by defending the victims of hate and injustice around the world. He also talks about his childhood devotion to God, and the "wounded faith” he was able to find as a survivor. (c ) American Academy of Achievement 2016
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Elie Wiesel: A Light in the Darkness
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