Elie Wiesel's The Perils Of Indifference

Words: 383
Pages: 2

Night is very successful in relating the reader to Elie’s fifteen-year-old self and the dangers he faces through the hopelessness of the Holocaust, “The race towards death had begun.” (10 Wiesel). Unfortunately, Night is obviously completely focussed on the view of hopelessness when it is a life or death situation and this makes the impactful literary piece less skilled in seeing the loss of hope in situations of less or more impact. “The Perils of Indifference” immerses the reader into a world of complex and guilt creating indifference from the faults of the US when the Holocaust first began. Night gives the reader an idea of the horrors of giving into hopelessness and turning into an inhuman blob floating through death believing you are alive.