American-Romanian Elie Wiesel in his formal speech “The Perils of Indifference,” asserts that we must change, and warns us the dangers of an indifferent attitude toward crimes committed against the rest of humanity not only to prosecute but to itself. He develops his claim by describing his time he spent at the concentration camps, and when he was rescued. When he share this he is using imagery to describe the harsh conditions he went through, and the joy he had when he was rescued by the “American Soldiers.” Through his speech he also uses repetition with the words “indifference,” “gratitude,” and humanity to emphasize the significance the message is is trying to convey with his speech. Lastly he also uses pathos. His speech is emotionally loaded for example he says “He was finally free bt there was no joy in his heart”. Wiesel's purpose is to illustrate the dangers of indifference in order to persuade people not to be indifferent. He establishes a serious, thankful, and experienced tone for the readers by using rhetorical devices such as imagery, repetition, …show more content…
There have been many more genocides that many people do not know have occurred or are still taking place to this day. One of them being in 2003, the Darfur genocide. The government of Sudan responded to a rebellion by civilians and this resulted in the deaths of over 300,000 when he began a genocide. This genocide is still occurring to this day. It was declared a genocide by the United States Secretary of State Colin Powell on 9 September 2004 and no genocidal policy has been pursued and implemented in Darfur by the Government authorities. The world watches and does nothing to stop it. What about the children so many can be saved. We are losing our humanity as we do nothing. This is what Wiesel was trying to teach us to not do, and it is exactly what we are