Elie Wiesel was a nice person before the holocaust. Elie Wiesel was a Jewish Romanian-American writer, professor and the author of the bestselling book Night as well as many other books dealing with Judaism, the Holocaust, and the moral responsibility of the people to fight hatred, racism and genocide. Elie along with his family was sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland in 1944 during the Holocaust. A teenager at that time, he became an eye witness to the atrocities meted out to Jews in the concentration camps. Elie lost his parents in the holocaust, but his two sisters survived. Along with the other prisoners of the camps, he was liberated following the ending of the World War II, but the memories of the war haunted him forever.
Elie moved to France where he studied literature, philosophy and psychology at the Sorbonne and became a journalist. For years he refused to write about or discuss his experiences during the Holocaust but reconsidered his decision on the advice of Francois Mauriac who encouraged him to write about his traumatic experiences. Wiesel wrote the memoir Night which became a grim testimonial of the Holocaust. Eventually his career took him to the United States where he
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In May 1944, Nazi Germany, with Hungary's agreement, forced Jews living in Sighet to be deported to the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland. At the age of 15, Wiesel and his entire family were sent to Auschwitz as part of the Holocaust, which took the lives of more than 6 million Jews. Wiesel was sent to Buna Werke labor camp, a sub-camp of Auschwitz III-Monowitz, with his father where they were forced to work under deplorable, inhumane conditions. They were transferred to other Nazi camps and force marched to Buchenwald where his father died after being beaten by a German soldier, just three months before the camp was