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You’ll find many remembrances of and interviews with the Auschwitz survivor, Nobel Peace Prize winner, and prolific author in the coming days, so this post will focus on his most well-known works. After all, Wiesel is no longer physically with us, but his words live on, and that is crucial when we remember the millions of victims of the Holocaust.
(You can find a complete list of Wiesel’s books here.)
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The Jews of Silence (1966)- Written after Wiesel was sent by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz to the Soviet Union (in 1965) to report on the lives of the Jews living behind the Iron Curtain, this testimonial reveals what it was like to cling to one’s Jewish heritage at great personal risk.
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The Forgotten (1992)- A novel about memory and how it binds together multiple generations, The Forgotten introduces us to Elhanan Rosenbaum, a psychotherapist and Holocaust survivor. When a disease threatens to destroy his memory, Elhanan passes on his life story to his son, whose subsequent trip to the ancestral Romanian town reveals a disturbing chapter in the family’s history.
(first posted on Book Riot 7/12/16)
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