The Perils Of Indifference By Elie Wiesel

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Indifference is a lack of interest, concern, or sympathy; to be indifferent is to not care about the struggles of anyone but yourself. Most times, indifference is portrayed as a bad thing that does nothing good to anyone. In the CommonLit article “Elie Wiesel’s ‘The Perils of Indifference’ speech” Elie Wiesel, describes some thoughts that he has on indifference and its effect on history. Elie Wiesel agrees that indifference is a bad thing that should be addressed because it always benefits the aggressor and never the victim, it reduces others to an abstraction, and it’s what makes humans inhuman. First and foremost, the aggressor is like a school bully. Nobody likes him, but nobody is willing to stand up to him or help the victims. By ignoring the situation, the bully has no reason to stop bullying. It is the same concept just on a much grander scale. Elie Wiesel says, “...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”(Weisel, 10). Indifference should be addressed so those who are in need won't feel alone and forgotten. Wiesel’s goal is to get more people to stand up to the “bully” and address the problem. Once people rally together and acknowledge the victims, the aggressor can no longer feel superior to the poor group of people. …show more content…

Nobody likes to be left out or ignored, but that is how people in need feel when there is no help coming. The speech reads, “Indifference reduces the other to an abstraction”(Wiesel, 6). The definition of indifference is a lack of interest, concern, or sympathy. A lack of sympathy toward those in need is just putting yourself above them. People by human nature love talking about themselves. If we had the choice we wouldn’t give a second thought about anyone but ourselves; until we are the ones being persecuted and are looking out for

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