By showing the world courage, heroes impact our society and teach us how to be better people. Georgia Gilmore and Elie Wiesel demonstrated courage during the hard times of segregation and the Holocaust. Georgia Gilmore courageously fought for the civil rights movement despite all that was against her. Her actions inspired many people to do the same. Georgia Gilmore was an African American woman that lived in Montgomery, Alabama, and participated in the Montgomery bus boycott by fundraising for the organization, Club from Nowhere. Georgia organized black women to cook together without raising suspicion of white people. Georgia poured the proceeds into an alternative transportation system for bus boycotters. The testimony made Gilmore a hero to local blacks, Edge …show more content…
It takes a lot of bravery to stand up to the government. Only a courageous and fearless person could risk their job for what they believed in, and Georgia Gilmore did just that. Elie Weisel is a hero for devoting the majority of his life to making the world a better place for everyone by being the voice people need. Elie Wiesel was a Holocaust survivor who shared his experience with the whole world. In the United States Holocaust Museum, Wiesele's biography states, “Wiesel describes his experiences and emotions at the hands of the Nazis during the Holocaust: the roundup of his family and neighbors in the Romanian town of Sighet; deportation by cattle car to the concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau; the division of his family forever during the selection process; the mental and physical anguish he and his fellow prisoners experienced as they were stripped of their humanity; and the death march from Auschwitz-Birkenau to the concentration camp at Buchenwald” During the Holocaust, Wiesel experienced some of the most brutal things anybody has ever had to experience. The nazis tortured him both mentally and physically and sent him to march to Buchenwald. The nazis
There is one undeniable fact about life: Human Rights are a necessity. It is basic and bare minimum, yet we have struggled to respect those rights in the History of America and the history of the world as a whole. We have seen many activists focus on this topic, many of whom have made life easier for those whose differences seem to refuse them refuge, two of whom are Martin Luther King Jr., and Elie Wiesel. King and Wiesel were legendary activists whose ability to share stories of trauma and pain led to social change. King and Wiesel use literary devices such as repetition and metaphors to convey a message of equality and peace throughout their speeches.
He and a group of other Jewish survivors managed to be traded out of a concentration camp in a prisoner exchange. After leaving Dachau, the concentration camp, on a train. He was never actually sent to the prisoner exchange but was lucky enough to be free from concentration camps, as the war was almost over. However, before they were free, they were stopped by a Nazi patrol and overheard that they were going to be shot that night. The next morning, all of the Nazis from that patrol were gone, and it was overheard that it was because the head officer’s girlfriend pleaded for him to leave the Jews alone.
In January 1945 he got move to a different camp called Buchenwald. ‘’Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. ’ The Jews allies were the British, French, and U.S. While all this bad was going on they never did nothing to stop it. If they would had done something about it there wouldn’t been so many lives gone.
About one-third of all Jewish people in the world were murdered during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel was not apart of that appalling statistic and credits luck for his survival, although his experiences were no less tragic. Elie Wiesel himself writes that he is not sure how or why he survived however, went on to accomplish many things with the chance he was given in honor of those who lost their lives. Wiesel was able to write novels, create his own foundation and receive awards during his time on Earth. Amy Ray once said,“It's important to have a voice; it's more important to use it.”
Elie Wiesel and Martin Luther King both gave speeches to express and remind the people of immense issues We have committed in our history using literary elements such as themes about freedom and prominent Diction about even children being mistreated. Both incredibly influential people had to go through atrocities We the people have let happen. It was a call for help and a way to always remind everyone to never forget what They and their people went through.
Elie Wiesel and Martin Luther King Jr. use powerful diction and similar repetition to convey a sense of urgency and remembrance for the oppressed. King’s passion and knowledge about the topic is seen throughout his speech and how the Emancipation Proclamation came as a “great beacon light of hope” to the millions of slaves. He creates a sense of urgency in the speech and empowers others to “rise from the dark and desolate valley of segregation” and follow “the path of racial injustice.” King uses this compelling diction to try and mend the broken society, and express his hope of equality "for all of God's children '' through his faith. Elie Wiesel also declares his faith "in God and even in his creation" to give hope in stopping something like the Holocaust from ever occurring again.
During the 1960’s Weisel helped Jews in the Soviet Union who faced discrimination, persecution, and were denied the freedom to worship. As a result, United States President Jimmy Carter made Elie Wiesel the chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council. In addition, because of Wiesel’s efforts a Holocaust Remembrance Day and the United States Holocaust Memorial Muesum were created. Elie Weisel’s main goal of his life was to help anyone that was experiencing persecution and promised himself to never be a indifferent to these people. For instance, he provided for the Miskito Indians, refugees, victims of famine and genocide in Africa, and victims of war.
Some of the Jews that survived at Auschwitz were liberated. Auschwitz was a killing center for the jews or others that the Nazis were against. Called the undesirables. Some punishments and executions they used were shooting, hanging, starvation to death, and the post. The text states, “The victim’s hands were tied behind his back and he was hung from a post so that his feet could not touch the ground.
The ones who were not immediately killed were sent to work in some very harsh conditions: with terrible meal plans, very little sleep, and disease. It was a fearful environment. That is not even including the torture of their work. The confinement came into play when the Nazis made the Jews watch their peers get hung for breaking rules. “Long live liberty!
The Nazis tortured them and put them in gas chambers which they called them “showers” to trick the jews. Hans Frank let a lot of people down. He hurt a lot of people. He hurt alot of people but he captured people who are not full germa Hans Frank's typical back story. Him and his nazi self.
Elie Wiesel and Martin Luther King Jr. use a passionate, direct tone as well as repetition to convey the need for equality and a sense of urgency. Wiesel’s speech was encouraging and touching when he used words like “kingdom of night” and “desperately” to make the readers feel sympathy that could change their minds about the world. He spoke confidently and his words were direct, which was all trying to address that “we must always take sides” or the world won’t ever change. If we stay silent and take no positions, the country will have a greater chance of failing because no one is willing to make a difference. In the same way, King wants to influence the way people view and act upon the world.
Martin Luther King and Elie Wiesel both use imagery to show the oppression and cruelties of what happened to their people. Both speakers use repetition to give messages of change, although King uses more hopeful messages to inspire positive changes rather than the sorrowful influence used by Wiesel. Both speakers try to give the audience reasons to grow and change. Elie Wiesel uses literary elements to show the sorrow and oppression of the acts committed against the Jews. Elie uses imagery to talk about his past while he is prejudiced for being a Jew.
The week following these arrests the Jews were taken to concentration camps and were killed in horrific ways. Many of them ended up being sent to Auschwitz, one of the most well-known death camps. Others were sent to the camps Pithiviers and Beaune-la-Rolande, and their heads were shaved and they were being tested for many things, many died in extremely gruesome ways. By
No one really believed him until it was too late. People were sent off into concentration camps, the camps were made to keep prisoners and then kill them once they prove that they have no use anymore. People were separated. Families and friends weren’t put into the same places
Through their protagonists both texts reveal that the body is push to the extreme limits putting your body in a position that you though were not possible is shown and done clearly by both main charactert’s. Although the pain in both texts is different, Aron must amputate his arm while Eliezer runs over twenty kilometres in knee deep snow when absolutely fatigued, both text highlight that the body can cope while having unimaginable pain. Wiesel’s simile that he was starting to run mechanically by “putting one foot in front of the other, like a machine” while running this portrays how he feels separated from his body during the run. The comparison between both suggests an automated action through its word choice and supports the idea that even