Genocide. The. A word that had to be created to describe the 6 million lives lost in the Holocaust. meaning “the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group”. Ellie Wiesel, a survivor of the Holocaust, reflects on the purpose of his book Night as he accepts his Nobel peace prize. In his speech, he states: “if we forget them, they will be killed a second time. And this time, it will be our responsibility.” (Wiesel 118). This signifies Wiesel's understanding of the weight his book carries. This book projects all the terror, fear and helplessness of this time.Wiesel acknowledges that he must carry the pain, because forgetting the pain allows the ones who are …show more content…
Furthermore, within the dark tale of Night lies a poem, woven through Wiesel’s mind. He describes in his own words how he will never forget the smoke, the flames, the bodies consumed by the flames and turned into smoke. The moments he abandoned his God and his faith. Wiesel - 34. This evidence reflects Wiesel’s personal thoughts. He states why he will never forget the pain and he wishes to convey the same message to the reader, allowing them to carry the weight of that pain with them. This rendition of his past illustrates a cataclysmic picture of one of the darkest times in our history. A narration that is meant to carry the weight of agony and manifest the fear of the past for a better future. Wiesel reiterates the point of never forgetting what happened, as we cannot let it happen again. Lest the pain of those lost returns. Additionally, an article written by the Washington Post further explains the importance of learning from the past for a better future. In the article “It happened” we see in the text "We have to be very strong and say it again and again and again: 'It happened,”(Edwards