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         Wiesel Elie:     more books (99)
  1. Elie Wiesel: Between Memory and Hope
  2. Elie Wiesel Messenger Revised: Theology by Robert Mcafee Brown, 1989-04-30
  3. Elie Wiesel: Witness for Humanity (Life Portraits) by Rachel A. Koestler-Grack, 2009-01
  4. Sages and Dreamers: Biblical, Talmudic, and Hasidic Portraits and Legends by Elie Wiesel, 1991-10
  5. Golem: The Story of a Legend by Elie Wiesel, 1983-09
  6. Dawn by Elie Wiesel, 1971-06
  7. Student Companion to Elie Wiesel (Student Companions to Classic Writers) by Sanford Sternlicht, 2003-11-30
  8. Night by Elie Wiesel, 2006
  9. Night [NIGHT 4D] by Elie(Author) ;Wiesel, Marion(Translator);Guidall, George(Read by) Wiesel, 2006-01-31
  10. Elie Wiesel: Surviving The Holocaust, Speaking Out Against Genocide (Holocaust Heroes and Nazi Criminals) by Lisa Moore, 2005-10-01
  11. [2006] [PAPERBACK]Night (Oprah's Book Club) [Paperback] [2006] by Elie Wiesel (Author), 2006
  12. Hope against Hope: Johann Baptist Metz and Elie Wiesel Speak Out on the Holocaust (Stimulus Books) by Ekkehard Schuster, Reinhold Bochert-Kimmig, 1999-05
  13. Elie Wiesel: A Challenge to Theology by Graham B., Jr. Walker, 1988-02
  14. Elie Wiesel And the Art of Story Telling

61. ELIE WIESEL ANNOUNCED AS MSU SPRING CONVOCATION SPEAKER -- MSU Press Releases
elie wiesel nobel laureate, human rights advocate and world-renowned Jewish scholar- will be Michigan State University's 1999 spring convocation speaker.
http://newsroom.msu.edu/news/archives/1999/03/wiesel.html
University Relations Search Press Releases Entire Site for NEWSROOM HOME PRESS RELEASES EXPERT GUIDE MEDIA GUIDELINES ... CONTACT US
To receive press releases by e-mail, send request to newsroom@msu.edu Newsroom Home Press Releases March 1999
Contact: University Relations (517) 355-2281, or hodack@msu.edu
ELIE WIESEL ANNOUNCED AS MSU SPRING CONVOCATION SPEAKER
EAST LANSING, Mich. - Elie Wiesel - Nobel laureate, human rights advocate and world-renowned Jewish scholar - will be Michigan State University's 1999 spring convocation speaker. Wiesel will participate in the graduation ceremony on Friday, May 7, at the Jack Breslin Student Events Center. Wiesel, whose personal experience of the Holocaust has led him to espouse the cause of human rights and defend peace throughout the world, will address undergraduates at the campuswide convocation at 1 p.m. "Elie Wiesel, through his work, immense insight and unbelievable life experiences, is one of this century's true guiding lights," said MSU President Peter McPherson. "It is a tremendous honor, one that speaks highly of this university, to have Wiesel as our undergraduate convocation speaker." Wiesel has a long history of working toward peace. A devoted supporter of Israel, Wiesel has also defended the cause of Soviet Jews, Nicaragua's Miskito Indians, Argentina's "disappeared," Cambodian refugees, the Kurds, South African apartheid victims, famine victims in Africa, and more recently, the victims and prisoners in the former Yugoslavia.

62. Elie Wiesel: One More Lie
On February 7, 1996, elie wiesel, nobel Peace Prize laureate and professor at BostonUniversity, was awarded an honorary doctorate by Jules Verne University at
http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v18/v18n3p28a_Faurisson.html
Institute for Historical Review
Elie Wiesel: One More Lie
by Robert Faurisson On February 7, 1996, Elie Wiesel, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and professor at Boston University, was awarded an honorary doctorate by Jules Verne University at Picardy, France. Reporting on the speech delivered by Wiesel on that occasion, the local newspaper (Le Courrier Picard, Feb. 9, 1996) informed readers: One question the public was anxious be answered: "And what do you make of the emergence of revisionist and Holocaust denying tendencies?" Wiesel responded: "Those are [the work of] virulent and vicious anti-Semites, organized and well-financed. On the day I received the Nobel Prize there were hundreds in the street demonstrating against me. Never will I afford them the dignity of a debate. These are morally sick individuals. While I am able to fight against injustice, I have no idea how to go about fighting against ugliness." Here one can see Elie Wiesel's typical phraseology, but his statement that "on the day I received the Nobel Prize there were hundreds in the street demonstrating against me" is something new, and constitutes yet one more lie by this "prominent false witness," as I have called him, or "Shoah merchant" as Pierre Vidal-Naquet (in an interview with M. Folco, in Zéro, April 1987, p. 57) has called him. As someone who was present in Oslo at the site of the award ceremony in December 1986, I am able to report that the number of protesters there was precisely zero. Three persons did show up to distribute a leaflet, printed in both Swedish and English, entitled "Elie Wiesel: A Prominent False Witness" [also available as an IHR leaflet]. All three of these persons were Frenchmen: Pierre Guillaume, Serge Thion and myself.

63. A Prominent False Witness: Elie Wiesel
Institute for Historical Review. IHR leaflets. A Prominent False Witness eliewiesel. By Robert Faurisson elie wiesel won the nobel Peace Prize in 1986.
http://www.ihr.org/leaflets/wiesel.html
Institute for Historical Review
A Prominent False Witness: Elie Wiesel
By Robert Faurisson ELIE WIESEL won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986. He is generally accepted as a witness to the Jewish "Holocaust," and, more specifically, as a witness to the legendary Nazi extermination gas chambers. The Paris daily Le Monde emphasized at the time that Wiesel was awarded the Nobel Prize because: ( note 1 These last years have seen, in the name of so-called "historical revisionism," the elaboration of theses, especially in France, questioning the existence of the Nazi gas chambers and, perhaps beyond that, of the genocide of the Jews itself. But in what respect is Elie Wiesel a witness to the alleged gas chambers? By what right does he ask us to believe in that means of extermination? In an autobiographical book that supposedly describes his experiences at Auschwitz and Buchenwald, he nowhere mentions the gas chambers. ( note 2 ) He does indeed say that the Germans executed Jews, but ... by fire; by throwing them alive into flaming ditches, before the very eyes of the deportees! No less than that! Here Wiesel the false witness had some bad luck. Forced to choose from among several Allied war propaganda lies, he chose to defend the fire lie instead of the boiling water, gassing, or electrocution lies. In 1956, when he published his testimony in Yiddish, the fire lie was still alive in certain circles. This lie is the origin of the term Holocaust. Today there is no longer a single historian who believes that Jews were burned alive. The myths of the boiling water and of electrocution have also disappeared. Only the gas remains.

64. Haaretz - English
nobel laureate elie wiesel says Saddam must be confronted. By The Associated Press.elie wiesel speaking after his White House meeting Thursday. (Photo AP).
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/267934.html
Hebrew site Search site Make Haaretz your homepage Print Edition News Business Features Sports ... Elections 2003 Previous Editions Select Day 21 apr 20 apr 18 apr 17 apr 16 apr 15 apr 14 apr 13 apr 11 apr 10 apr 09 apr 08 apr Weather Expect local showers in the morning, with temperatures rising during the day. Click for more Currency rates Representative rates Apr. 15 IL Market Dollar Euro GB Sterling Yen (100) Jor. Dinar Indices Last update 14:18-22/04 Dollar Euro TA 100 Maof Tel-Tech Nasdaq Dow This Day in Haaretz Today`s Papers Map of Israel Shabbat Times ... Tech Support setTiArrays('0', 'Anti-war Labor MP George Galloway rubbishes report he got 375,000 pounds a year in payoffs from Iraqi government', '14:07', 'Reuters'); setTiArrays('1', 'Rescue workers find body of soldier swept away Monday in Jordan River', '13:45', 'Israel Radio'); setTiArrays('2', 'One man killed, two moderately wounded in car accident at Kfar Yehoshua junction, near Atlit', '13:25', 'Haaretz'); setTiArrays('3', 'Police: resident of Israeli Arab village of Arara confesses to driving suicide bomber who carried out Netanya attack', '13:05', 'Army Radio'); setTiArrays('4', 'Talks between teachers` groups, education and finance ministries end inconclusively', '13:03', 'Israel Radio');

65. Untitled
elie wiesel nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Holocaust Survivor October30, 2003 Thursday, 8 pm. nobel Peace Prize winner and Boston
http://www.speakerseries.com/wiesel.htm
ELIE WIESEL
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Holocaust Survivor
October 30, 2003 - Thursday, 8 pm.

Nobel Peace Prize winner and Boston University Professor, Elie Wiesel, has worked on behalf of oppressed people for much of his adult life. His personal experience of the Holocaust has led him to use his talents as an author, teacher and storyteller to defend human rights and peace throughout the world. Wiesel's efforts have earned him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States Congressional Gold Medal and the Medal of Liberty Award, the rank of Grand Officer in the French Legion of Honor, and in 1986, the Nobel Peace Prize. He has received more than ninety honorary degrees from institutions of higher learning. In 1978, President Jimmy Carter appointed him Chairman of the President's Commission on the Holocaust. In 1980 he became Founding Chairman of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council. Elie Wiesel is also the Founding President of the Paris based Universal Academy of Cultures. His more than forty books have won numerous awards, including the Prix Medicis for

66. Untitled
elie wiesel nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Holocaust Survivor October29, 2003 Wednesday, 8 pm. nobel Peace Prize winner and Boston
http://www.pittsburghspeakerseries.org/wiesel.htm
ELIE WIESEL
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Holocaust Survivor
October 29, 2003 -
Wednesday , 8 pm.
Nobel Peace Prize winner and Boston University Professor, Elie Wiesel, has worked on behalf of oppressed people for much of his adult life. His personal experience of the Holocaust has led him to use his talents as an author, teacher and storyteller to defend human rights and peace throughout the world. Wiesel's efforts have earned him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States Congressional Gold Medal and the Medal of Liberty Award, the rank of Grand Officer in the French Legion of Honor, and in 1986, the Nobel Peace Prize. He has received more than ninety honorary degrees from institutions of higher learning. In 1978, President Jimmy Carter appointed him Chairman of the President's Commission on the Holocaust. In 1980 he became Founding Chairman of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council. Elie Wiesel is also the Founding President of the Paris based Universal Academy of Cultures. His more than forty books have won numerous awards, including the Prix Medicis for

67. PEACEMAKER HERO: ELIE WIESEL
activist. elie wiesel wrote the famous Holocaust memoir Night. EmilyGreene Balch received the nobel Peace Prize in 1946. Gandhi
http://myhero.com/hero.asp?hero=ewiesel

68. Elie Wiesel To Present Lecture At FAU
24, 2003) – Holocaust survivor and nobel Peace Prize recipient elie wiesel willpresent a lecture entitled, “PostHolocaust Christian/Jewish Dialogue
http://www.fau.edu/divdept/schmidt/nr/february/wiesell_022402.htm
MEDIA CONTACT: Stacia Smith
561-297-2971; ssmith@fau.edu
Elie Wiesel to Present Lecture at FAU BOCA RATON, FL (Feb. 24, 2003) Wiesel, a native of Transylvania (Romania), was imprisoned in the Nazi internment camp Auschwitz when he was 15 years old. While his two older sisters and his father survived Auschwitz, his mother and younger sister perished. Wiesel and his father were later transported to another camp, Buchenwald, where his father died. Three months after Wiesel received the Nobel Peace Prize, he and his wife established The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity. Its mission is to advance the cause of human rights and peace throughout the world by creating a new forum for the discussion of urgent ethical issues confronting humanity. An American citizen since 1963, Elie Wiesel lives in New York with his wife and son. This event is sponsored by Alan L. Berger, Ph.D., Raddock Eminent Scholar Chair of Holocaust Studies in the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters at FAU. For more information, call the Holocaust and Judaic Studies B.A. Program at 561-297-2979.
Return to News Releases
Return to Schmidt College HomePage
FAU Home Page
Send comments to: Sue Yap

69. Jewish-American Hall Of Fame -- Virtual Tour
When presenting elie wiesel with the nobel Peace Prize in 1986, EgilAavik said wiesel is a messenger to mankind. His message is
http://www.amuseum.org/jahf/virtour/page32.html
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... Touro Synagogue (RI) Events Discovering New World Expulsion of Jews First Jewish Settlers Meeting Queen Isabella ... Titanic Disaster Elie Wiesel (born 1928) Elie Wiesel was born on September 30, 1928 in Sighet, a small town in Rumania. His grandfather told the young Elie Hasidic tales, which later inspired Wiesel's writings. In 1944, the Nazis deported all of Sighet's 15,000 Jews to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Wiesel's mother and younger sister died in the gas chambers, and his father died later on a forced march to Buchenwald. In 1957, Wiesel joined the staff of the Jewish Daily Forward, a Yiddish-language newspaper in New York; he became a United States citizen in 1963. Not until 10 years after his release from Buchenwald, did Elie Wiesel begin writing about the Holocaust. His first biographical book "And the World Remained Silent" appeared in Yiddish, and four years later it was published in English as the novel "Night." This was followed by over two dozen semi-autobiographical novels, plays and essays, all bearing witness to the Holocaust.

70. Wiesel, Elie
wiesel, elie, 1928–, American writer, writing in French, b wiesel's novels, plays,retellings of biblical stories, and he won the 1986 nobel Peace Prize.
http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0852216

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Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Encyclopedia Wiesel, Elie Wiesel, Elie, concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald, where his family perished. After the war, he studied at the Sorbonne. In the 1950s he was a correspondent for Israeli, American, and French newspapers. After living in France and Israel, he settled in the United States in 1956 and became a citizen in 1963. Wiesel's novels, plays, retellings of biblical stories, and collections of Hasidic tales have focused on the importance of keeping the memory of the Holocaust alive. The autobiographical novel Night (1958) recounts the horrors he witnessed as a death camp inmate; it and two subsequent novels about concentration camp survivors

71. Metroactive Books | Elie Wiesel
AFTER COINING the term Holocaust, writing 30 books and winning the nobel PeacePrize, elie wiesel has finally gotten around to penning his memoirs.
http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/05.02.96/wiesel-9618.html
Metro Metroactive Central Archives A Life's Journey
Elie Wiesel tells his own story at last By Dan Pulcrano A FTER COINING the term Holocaust, writing 30 books and winning the Nobel Peace Prize, Elie Wiesel has finally gotten around to penning his memoirs. Wiesel makes it clear right away that All Rivers Run to the Sea (Knopf) is not an autobiography. He calls it "not the story of my life, but my stories," which is refreshing, for Wiesel is nothing if not a storyteller in the great Hasidic tradition. His childhood stories glow with the warmth of shtetl lifeof melon merchants and mystical bearded rabbisa world that came to an abrupt and tragic end and left Wiesel as the preeminent chronicler of its demise. In a world of fulsome authors and celebrities, it would be too easy to dismiss Wiesel's description of himself as a reluctant autobiographee as little more than glib false modesty. But Wiesel understands the random franchise of human life too well to rest on his laureate. His work is humbled by the knowledge that it could have just as easily been he who succumbed to the power of evil at Buchenwald, instead of bearing witness to his father's waning moments there. "I was ready to die in his place," Wiesel recalls, and acknowledges some ambivalence about the stellar career that grew out of that defining event. Wiesel remained true to character even after winning the Nobel Prize. During a visit eight years ago to this area, he described for reporters how winning the Nobel had changed his life: "The difference in my life is I have a secretary. It came, maybe, in my life too late for me to change. I go on teaching exactly the same way. I hardly miss a class. I try to talk less because it's time consuming. The only difference, I think, is that people occasionally listen."

72. ELIE WIESEL: UN MENSONGE DE PLUS ***** Par Robert Faurisson, 1996
Translate this page Le 7 février, elie wiesel, prix nobel de la Paix, professeur à l'Université deBoston, a reçu les insignes de docteur honoris causa de l'Université (de
http://www.abbc.com/aaargh/fran/archFaur/1995-2000/RF960315.html
AAARGH
ELIE WIESEL: UN MENSONGE DE PLUS
par Robert Faurisson
Lettre parue dans Rivarol , 15 mars 1996, p.2,
Wiesel
Le Courrier Picard Wiesel Dans le public une question fuse: "Et que pensez-vous de l'émergence des courants révisionnistes et négationnistes?" E. Wiesel répond: "Ce sont des antisémites virulents, vicieux, structurés et bien financés. Le jour où j'ai reçu le prix Nobel, ils étaient des centaines dans la rue à manifester contre moi. Jamais je ne leur accorderai la dignité du débat. Ce sont des êtres moralement malades. Je crois savoir combattre l'injustice, je ne sais pas combattre la laideur." Wiesel mais la phrase "le jour où j'ai reçu le prix Nobel, ils étaient des centaines dans la rue à manifester contre moi" est nouvelle et constitue un mensonge de plus chez ce "grand faux témoin", comme je l'ai appelé, ou chez ce "marchand de Shoah", comme l'a appelé Pierre Vidal-Naquet (Entretien avec Michel Folco

73. Theatre Store: Plays : By Playwright : Elie Wiesel
Items A Begger in Jerusalem (Trade Paper) elie wiesel, Schocken Books, Incorporated,May 1997 From the Publisher Winner of the 1986 nobel Prize.
http://dramaturgy.net/store/Plays/by_Playwright/Elie_Wiesel/
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Plays : by Playwright : Elie Wiesel
Items:
A Begger in Jerusalem (Trade Paper)
Elie Wiesel
Schocken Books, Incorporated, May 1997
From the Publisher: Winner of the 1986 Nobel Prize. Tracks the spiritual journey of a survivor of the Holocaust as he visits Jerusalem after the Six Day War.
All the Rivers Run to the Sea: Memoirs (Trade Paper)
Elie Wiesel
Schocken Books, Incorporated, October 1996
From the Publisher: Dragged through the horrors of Auschwitz and Buchenwald, Elie Wiesel emerged a bloodless adolescent, a mute spirit, with no homeland. In this passionate, poignant, and inspiring book, the Nobel Peace Laureate looks back at those years and what followed, including his search for love despite human evil and his deep devotion to Israel. of photos.
All the Rivers Run to the Sea: Memoirs (2 Cassettes) (Analog Audio Cassette)
Elie Wiesel
Random House, Incorporated, November 1995

74. Elie Wiesel: "Hope, Despair And Memory"
Hope, Despair and Memory. Excerpts from elie wiesel's nobel PrizeLecture. Without memory, our existence would be barren and opaque
http://www.zchor.org/WIESEL.HTM
Hope, Despair and Memory Excerpts from Elie Wiesel's Nobel Prize Lecture Without memory, our existence would be barren and opaque, like a prison cell into which no light penetrates; like a tomb which rejects the living. If anything can, it is memory that will save humanity. For me, hope without memory is like memory without hope... Stripped of possessions, all human ties severed, the prisoners found themselves in a social and cultural void. "Forget," they were told. "Forget where you came from; forget who you were. Only the present matters." Night after night, seemingly endless processions vanished into the flames, lighting up the sky. Fear dominated the universe. Indeed this was another universe; the very laws of nature had been transformed. Children looked like old men, old men whimpered like children. Men and women from every corner of Europe were suddenly reduced to nameless and faceless creatures desperate for the same ration of bread or soup, dreading the same end. Even their silence was the same for it resounded with the memory of those who were gone. Life in this accursed universe was so distorted, so unnatural that a new species had evolved. Waking among the dead, one wondered if one were still alive... Of course, we could try to forget the past. Why not? Is it not natural for a human being to repress what causes him pain, what causes him shame? Like the body, memory protects its wounds. When day breaks after a sleepless night, one's ghosts must withdraw; the dead are ordered back to their graves. But for the first time in history, we could not bury our dead. We bear their graves within ourselves.

75. ELIE WEIE
Accomplishments. elie wiesel received nobel Peace Prize in 1986.He also has written four or five books in his older years. He's
http://www.auroraschool.org/WAMWEB/WELIES.htm

76. Conversations With Elie Wiesel -- Elie Wiesel Richard D. Heffner
Conversations with elie wiesel is a farranging dialogue with the nobel Peace Prize-winneron the major issues of our time and on life’s timeless questions.
http://www.semcoop.com/detail/0805241922
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77. Elie Wiesel And The Question Of Palestine
In his 1986 nobel lecture, elie wiesel spoke with characteristic gravity on any attemptto reckon with the Holocaust There are no theological answers, there
http://www.tikkun.org/magazine/index.cfm/action/tikkun/issue/tik0211/article/021

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[ PROFILE ] Elie Wiesel and the Question of Palestine Mark Chmiel
The Witness of Elie Wiesel
Yet, throughout this illustrious career, Wiesel has been plagued by one controversy, a controversy as to how his apothegms against silence and his philosophy of witness apply to what Edward Said has called "the ethical dimensions of the Palestinian issue." Jews as various as Noam Chomsky, Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, and Israeli journalist Matti Golan have been critical of Wiesel's position on Israel and the Palestinians. How has the Nobel-Laureate and advocate of remembrance addressed the question of Palestine? The Innocent Occupation Still, Wiesel expressed hope in future reconciliation between the Jews and Arabs. He conceived that this was the true vision of Israel, but, regrettably, felt extremists influenced Arab leaders. Such leaders did "not take the hand extended them, and therein lies the tragedy." Wiesel did not remark to Mauriac that shortly after Israel began its occupation, plans went through for Jewish settlements on occupied Palestinian lands; Palestinians were also the victims of Israeli collective punishment and deportation, which violated international law. Thus, 1967 witnessed Wiesel assuming the role of a mystic pacifist lauding the military triumph of an innocent, even passive, occupying power. Confronting the Suffering of the Palestinians Several years later, in 1979, Wiesel attempted to address the Palestinian movement for liberation in his letter "To a Young Palestinian Arab," published in

78. Elie Wiesel
Translate this page 11 septembre 2002 Un anniversaire de réflexion. Entretien avec ElieWiesel, écrivain et Prix nobel de la Paix. « Les terroristes
http://www.france-amerique.com/infos/dossier/September11/anniversay4.htm
DOSSIER 11 SEPTEMBRE : UN AN APRES L'actualite - I nternational
Politique

Economie

Actualité
... Dossiers
11 septembre 2002 :
Un anniversaire de r flexion
Entretien avec Elie Wiesel, écrivain et Prix Nobel de la Paix « Les terroristes ont fait de Dieu leur complice » L’écrivain francophone et Prix Nobel de la Paix a vécu les attentats du 11 septembre en tant que New-Yorkais. Pour celui qui a connu les camps de concentration, une tragédie ne diminue pas l’autre. Le juif qu’il est pense que le brûlot du Proche-Orient attise la haine qui menace la stabilité du monde. Il appelle à une réconciliation avec les communautés musulmanes. Profondément croyant, il dénonce le blasphème des terroristes qui ont « accaparé » Dieu pour en faire « un meurtrier ».
FRANCE-AMÉRIQUE : Vous avez souvent dit que vous n’aviez pas été surpris qu’un acte terroriste vise ainsi l’Amérique…
ELIE WIESEL
: Je m’attendais à un acte terroriste mais pas comme celui-ci. Parce que je savais que le terrorisme était une sorte de malédiction, affectant non seulement Israël mais aussi le monde entier. On n’arrête pas la haine, c’est un cancer dangereux. C’est l’ampleur de l’acte qui m’a saisi. J’ai été choqué, bouleversé, stupéfait, mais pas vraiment surpris. C’est l’ampleur de l’acte qui m’a saisi. On a d’abord parlé de 10 000 victimes… et voir à la télévision les mêmes images, les visages, la cendre, les gens qui courent, la police, les pompiers… C’est comme si c’était hier.

79. Porto Judaico : Nomes : Elie Wiesel
Translate this page Discurso de elie wiesel. HOPE, DESPAIR AND MEMORY Outro discurso de wiesel. THE MANIFESTOManifesto escrito por vários ganhadores do prêmio nobel, incluindo
http://www.geocities.com/pjudaico/nomes/nome_wie.html
Porto Judaico PRINCIPAL NOMES : ELIE WIESEL Elie Wiesel
Nasceu em Sighet, hoje Romênia. Aos quinze anos, em 1944, foi deportado junto com sua família e os judeus de sua cidade para campos de concentração, onde seus pais e sua irmã mais nova morreram. Passou pelos campos de Auschwitz, Buna, Gleiwitz, e Buchenwald, até ser libertado em abril de 1945. Após a guerra estudou literatura, filosofia e psicologia em Paris. Wiesel tornou-se um profícuo escritor, sempre abordando temáticas judaicas e a sua experiência no holocausto. Sua visão ampliou a compreensão dos acontecimentos de sua juventude, relacionando o shoah, uma tragédia judaica, com a tragédia da humanidade. Por seu trabalho na promoção dos direitos humanos em todo o mundo recebeu o Nobel da Paz em 1986.
em inglês:

80. Elie Wiesel - Guia De Judaísmo
Translate this page Relação de sites sobre o escritor e pacifista elie wiesel,ganhador do prêmio nobel da Paz. Um Guia SobreSites.
http://www.sobresites.com/judaismo/personalidade/wiesel.htm
Home Judaísmo Personalidades Página Inicial do Guia ... Art Spiegelman Elie Wiesel Golda Meir Maimônides Marc Chagall Genealogia ...
Gustavo Erlichman

Editor do seu Guia de Judaísmo na Internet
Neste Guia Em todos os Guias ELIE WIESEL Nasceu em Sighet, hoje Romênia. Aos quinze anos, em 1944, foi deportado junto com sua família e os judeus de sua cidade para campos de concentração , onde seus pais e sua irmã mais nova morreram. Passou pelos campos de Auschwitz, Buna, Gleiwitz, e Buchenwald, até ser libertado em abril de 1945.
Após a guerra, estudou literatura, filosofia e psicologia em Paris. Wiesel tornou-se um profícuo escritor, sempre abordando temáticas judaicas e a sua experiência no holocausto . Sua visão ampliou a compreensão dos acontecimentos de sua juventude, relacionando o Shoah com a tragédia da humanidade.
Por seu trabalho na promoção dos direitos humanos em todo o mundo recebeu o Nobel da Paz em 1986.

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