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Night by Elie Wiesel

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Title: Night by Elie Wiesel


1
Night
By Elie Wiesel
2
  • Systematic persecution of European Jews began as
    soon as the Nazis gained control of Germany's
    government in 1933.
  • Within two years, the party decreed the Nuremberg
    Race Laws, which deprived Jews of German
    citizenship.
  • In 1938, Kristallnacht, a government-organized
    campaign of street violence, resulted in the
    destruction of synagogues, businesses, and homes
    in Germany, Austria, and Czechoslovakia.
  • Soon Jews would be forced to wear the Star of
    David sewn to their clothing, as we will see in
    Night.

The Holocaust
3
  • More on Kristallnacht.
  • Pogrom Russian term meaning to wreak havoc, to
    demolish violently
  • The term first was used to refer to
    well-organized, violent attacks perpetrated
    against the Jewish population in late 19th, and
    early 20th cen. Russia.
  • Now, pogroms is used to refer to such violent
    attacks against Jews before and during WWII.

The Holocaust
4
  • Adolf Hitlers Genocide
  • Genocide the deliberate and systematic
    extermination of a national, racial, political,
    or cultural group.
  • His goal was to exterminate all Jewish people.
  • In March of 1944, the German army took over
    Hungary, and the holocaust reached that region.
  • The Nazis murdered over 560,000 Hungarian Jews.

Hitlers army
5
  • Desperate after the Great Depression, Germans
    embraced Adolf Hitler's promise of riches to
    those he dubbed "the master race"Aryans of pure
    German blood.
  • On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland and
    started World War II.
  • The German army immediately began isolating the
    Jewish population in ghettos.
  • In 1942, Nazis declared "The Final Solution," a
    plan to murder all European Jews. (euphemism)
  • The widespread deportation of Jewish families
    from the ghettos to concentration camps began.

The Holocaust
6
  • While the book Night is about Wiesels life, it
    is not considered an autobiography, which
    typically sketches out an individuals entire
    life story.
  • He focuses strictly on those confined set of
    specific circumstances that have significantly
    impacted his life.
  • Because of this, his nonfiction story is
    considered a memoir rather than an autobiography.
  • Genre of Night

7
  • Genre of Night
  • Memoir a literary nonfiction genre that details
    a collection of specific and moving memories
    recorded by the individual who experienced them.
    (somewhat similar to an autobiography)
  • Elie- narrator and protagonist of his own
    history.
  • Why do you think Wiesel called his memoir Night?
  • Wiesel called his experiences of writing his
    story cathartic. Why do you think he used this
    word?

8
  • Preface Forewords- both introductory segments
    of a literary work.
  • Preface- written by the author to provide a solid
    basis of credibility.
  • Foreword- written by what would be seen as a
    credible source in an attempt to introduce the
    author to the reader remind the reader why they
    should be reading this particular work.

9
  • Anaphora a repetition of a word or series of
    words for poetic/dramatic effect. The repetition
    is typically found at the beginning of successive
    clauses.
  • Motif any subject, idea, concept, that is
    present all throughout a literary work. (It is
    almost like a mini theme)..

10
  • Foreword of Night
  • 1. How does Francois Mauriac feel about being
    interviewed by the young Wiesel? Why might this
    be?
  • 2. What does iniquity mean as it is used on p.
    xviii?
  • 3. What literary device is predominant on p. xix?
  • 4. Why might rhetorical questions be used so
    predominantly on p. xxi?
  • 5. Why does Mauriac end his foreword with All I
    could do was embrace him and weep?

11
  • Eliezer -  The narrator of Night, protagonist, a
    teenage boy in the 1940s. Dedicated to his
    faith in the beginning.
  • Chlomo - Eliezers father. His name is only
    mentioned one time throughout the novel, and is
    the only other character that is constant until
    the end. Highly regarded in the community.
  • Moshe the Beadle -
  • Eliezers teacher of Jewish mysticism, Moshe is
    a poor Jew who lives in Sighet.
  • Characters

12
Elie as a young boy.
  • Chapter 1
  • Moishe is an expert on the Kabbalah, an area of
    Judaism (Jewish mysticism) Elie has a deep
    interest in.
  • Moishe- awkward, doesnt seem to care about
    what others think of him. He is comfortable in
    his own skin, seems completely sustained by his
    faith.
  • Elies father thinks he is too young to study the
    Kabbalah. It is the sort of area that can only
    be understood by those with greater wisdom and
    life experience..

13
Elie as a young boy.
  • It is 1941..The memoir opens with Moishe the
    Beadle, a devoutly religious, poorest of the
    poor Jew from Elies hometown of Sighet in
    Transylvania (This region is now part of
    Romania).
  • Notice that people, though, dont seem to mind
    that hes poor hes almost invisible, a
    harmless kind of guy...
  • Moishe has a profound effect on Elies
    spirituality as a young boy of almost 13.

14
  • Elie has two older sisters, Hilda and Bea, and
    one younger sister, Tzipora.
  • Elies crying when he prays reveals his
    tremendous faith. He is tremendously moved and
    affected by the idea of praying to God. Moishe
    helps foster Elies dialogue with God.

15
  • Moishe, since he is a foreign
  • Jew, is taken out of Sighet
  • due to Nazi orders.
  • He tries to warn the others of
  • his horrible experiences, but they do need listen
    to
  • his warnings for various reasons they believe he
  • actually is crazy or they are trying to protect
  • themselves from hearing a horrible
    reality.(inciting incident)
  • Moishe is never the same again he never recovers
  • from his experiences.


16
  • 1943 was a reasonably good year for the
    Wiesels. The people of Sighet still fail to
    understand the depth of the threat that is fast
    approaching. Life is anything but normal.
  • Annihilate an entire people?...By what means?
    Of course we had heard of the Fascists, but it
    was all in the abstract. (not based in reality)-
    reflects their denial.
  • 1944- Red Army (Soviets) make strides against
    Hitler.
  • Optimism soon revived. personification
    situational irony a great contrast between what
    actually happens and what is expected or
    appropriate.

17
  • As begun during Kristallnacht, the Jews of Sighet
    notice their rights slipping away as edicts are
    issued. (an official order typically issued by
    the govt)
  • Mr. and Mrs. Wiesel both seem to be in a sort of
    shock
  • Life is anything but normal.
  • Ghettos functioned as part of a larger
    apparatus
  • complex state-sponsored system designed for
    the
  • purposes of control. Jews are not very
  • frightened of the Germans since they are
    kind at
  • first (strategic).
  • Anaphora- No more fear. No more anguish.
  • Ghetto was ruled by neither German or Jew it
    was ruled by delusion.

18
  • Night fell. Night is repeated as a metaphor
    for the emotional darkness and great sadness that
    envelopes Elie and his family. (Also a motif,
    powerful imagery.)
  • Stern The story that he had interrupted would
    remain unfinished.- foreshadowing of the
    separation that was soon to occur.
  • Chlomo knows the transports to the camps are
    about to begin. The ghettos will be emptied the
    citizens will innocently board train cars to be
    sent to the death camps.

19
  • Phylacteries- Jewish term- leather pouches or
    boxes worn on the body containing Old Testament
    passages. They are considered sacred objects or
    like relics.
  • Notice Elies description of the pitiful relics
    and valuable objects all over the
    ghettos..Elie still has his phylacteries.
  • Chief Rabbi was presumably forced to shave his
    beard. The face of Mrs. Wiesel is like a mask-
    her emotions have become deadened(Or have
    they?....)
  • Elie Oh God, Master of the Universe!-
    apostrophe, personification kenning- Notice
    his faith is still intact
  • Conflagration- destructive fire (foreshadowing
    of /allusion to the fires in the death camps)

20
  • Chapter 2
  • Notice the inhumane conditions the people are
    forced to tolerate during the transports they
    are so cramped they cannot lie down, are without
    anything to drink, and are extremely hot, are
    referred to as dogs.
  • Gestapo If anyone escapes, those remaining would
    be shot.
  • Mrs. Schachter- her hysteria is a foreshadowing
    (prediction/hint) of what awaits them. They beat
    her mercilessly as she screams repeatedly about
    fire. She currently is with her son. She never
    recovered from being separated from her husband
    and two sons. She knows what awaits them. (How
    is she like Moishe?)
  • The separation had totally shattered her.

21
  • Chapter 2
  • Their great ignorance they do not know what is
    happening at Auschwitz. Also, who does Elie
    refer to as strange-looking creatures? Why do
    you think he does this? Who are these people?
  • The smell of burning flesh overpowers them as
    they arrive at Birkenau, part of the Auschwitz
    complex.
  • The only thing that quiets Mrs. Schachter is the
    stopping of the train. Why might this be?
  • It is around midnight.

22
  • Chapter 3
  • Elie feels pressure to lie about his age and
    occupation to the SS officer since only those who
    are young and useful will escape selection. He
    is separated forever from his mother and Tzipora.
  • The prisoners want to fight for their lives, but
    they are unable to do so under constant threat of
    death We cant let them kill us like that, like
    cattle in a slaughterhouse.
  • Dr. Mengele- Angel of Death- kenning- among the
    worst of the SS officers- famous for his horrible
    medical experimentation upon the inmates.
  • Elie is scarred by the sight of babies thrown
    into the flames
  • Never shall I forget those flames- anaphora-
    his faith is forever changed by what happened.

23
  • Characters
  • Dr. Josef Mengele - 
  • the historically infamous Dr. Mengele was the
    cruel doctor who presided over the selection of
    arrivals at Auschwitz/Birkenau.
  • Idek - Eliezers Kapo (Nazi police officer at
    Buna, the work camp)

Dr. Josef Mengele was appropriately nicknamed
the Angel of Death by inmates at Auschwitz
24
  • Chapter 3
  • Kaddish- Jewish prayer of mourning for the dead
  • Elies changes both physically and spiritually
    he is tattooed, made to wear a uniform, his head
    is shaved, and forced to endure his various
    beatings and others suffering, esp his
    fathers.
  • Bela Katz- prisoner who is forced to throw his
    own father into the furnace
  • Who are Kapos?.....
  • The Gypsy beats Elies father, Chlomo.
  • The inscription on the gates of Auschwitz Arbeit
    Macht Frei- Work Makes You Free- irony and
    propaganda
  • Never shall I forget those flames- anaphora-
    his faith is forever changed by what happened.

25
Auschwitz
26
  • Chapter 3
  • The prisoners are given rations black coffee,
    stale bread, soup. At first, Elie does not wish
    to eat, but then he wishes to eat to avoid
    starvation.
  • A-7713 Elies tattoo- he is stripped of his
    identity literally and figuratively.He is no
    longer thought of as a person.
  • Stein- an old relative of the Weisels. He is
    looking for his wife and young sons. To protect
    Stein, Elie lies and say he knows they are ok.
  • Stein We never saw him again. He had been given
    the news. The real news. verbal irony- Elie is
    referring to Steins death
  • Akiba Drumer a fellow prisoner whose faith seems
    to be rock solid We have no right to despair..

27
Chapter 4
  • At the end of Ch. 3, Elie and his father are
    moved from Birkenau to Buna. Both camps were
    part of the Auschwitz complex in present-day
    Poland.
  • Young boys became targets of sexual abuse at the
    hands of lead Nazi officers. Notice how the tent
    leader and head of the camp are portrayed very
    negatively.
  • Kommandos work blocks or camps
  • Elie wishes to hold onto his shoes despite being
    offered more rations. (They were all I had
    left.) They are later taken from him anyway.

28
Chapter 4
  • Medical examinations determine who is fit to work
    and who will be sent to the crematorium.
    Dentists would check for gold crowns and
    eventually extract them.
  • Juliek, a Polish prisoner and gifted violinist,
    is forbidden to play German music (Beethoven).
  • Franek- cruel Polish foreman, Kapo
  • Elie pretends to be ill to save his gold crown.
    Note the irony surrounding the Jewish dentist he
    is hung for keeping the gold crowns he extracted
    from the Nazis.

29
Chapter 4
  • Idek- Kapo in charge of Elies work crew- prone
    to random and violent fits of madness, beats Elie
    and his father with an iron bar for virtually no
    reason
  • FLASHFORWARD- literary device in which the story
    shifts forward in time. It reveals important
    parts of the story that are yet to occur.
  • During the flashforward, Elie discusses meeting
    the Jewish Frenchwoman who had helped him after
    Idek had beaten him the first time. He learns
    during the flashforward that she was Jewish.

30
Chapter 4
  • Franek beats Elies father Chlomo mercilessly so
    that Elie will give him his gold crown. Elies
    gold crown is extracted with the help of a rusty
    spoon. Franek is later transferred to another
    camp.
  • Elie catches Idek engaging in sexual relations
    with a female prisoner. Idek has Elie beaten
    publicly with a whip for spying.
  • A man is shot for trying to steal a ration of
    soup during the Allied air raid.
  • The camp at Buna is being bombed prisoners must
    dispose of it.

31
Chapter 4
  • Juliek whispers to Elie before the hanging of a
    young boy for theft This ceremony, will it be
    over soon? Im hungry
  • Notice how desperate and even inhuman the
    prisoners had become. Elie himself had said that
    bread and food became his entire life.
  • Oberkapo- popular head overseer, is tortured and
    transferred to Auschwitz for sabotage during an
    air raid. The young pipel (described as an
    angel) who had helped him is hung publicly.
  • During this hanging, many are weeping, including
    some Nazi officers. The boy is so light that the
    hanging takes a long time. For Gods sake,
    where is God? (Elie the gallows)

32
Chapter 5
  • Chapter opens with prisoners gathering in prayer
    for Rosh Hashanah.
  • Elies faith continues to deteriorate- refers to
    himself as a former mystic, does not fast on
    Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year-
    symbolic of his rebellion against God
  • Achtung!- German for attention, instills fear
    in the prisoners
  • Elie constantly begins to fear that his father
    will not pass the selection process
  • Elie avoids selection only by running fast to
    prove he is fit, active, healthy.

33
Chapter 5
  • Elies inheritance- a knife and a spoon. He
    sobs, showing how much he has been degraded and
    how much he fears his fathers death
  • Akiba Drumer, previously so faithful, struggles
    with his faith, but it is still present somewhat.
  • Notice that the inmates do not say the Kaddish
    for him as Akiba had requested. They forget, are
    too concerned with survival.

34
Chapter 5
  • Elies right foot begins to swell for unknown
    causes in the infirmary (hospital).
  • His neighbor, suffering from dysentery, fears
    Hitlers forces greatly, warns Elie that he
    should must leave the infirmary to avoid
    selection. (What would selection mean?...)
  • Elies operation goes well his leg does not have
    to be amputated after all..
  • Rhetorical questions throughout the narration
    make the reader think, heighten the mood, add
    drama and tension.

35
Quick Review of Key Literary Terms
  • The plot of most literary works can be broken
    down into parts
  • 1.EXPOSITION
  • Introduction of setting and characters
  • 2. INCITING INCIDENT
  • Turning point, or key event that introduces a
    conflict, drives plot forward
  • 3. RISING ACTION/COMPLICATION
  • 4. CLIMAX moment of highest tension
  • 5. FALLING ACTION/DENOUEMENT
  • 6. RESOLUTION Conflicts resolved

36
Diagramming the Plot.
  • 1.EXPOSITION
  • Audience is introduced to Elie, his family,
    Moishe
  • 2. INCITING INCIDENT/EXCITING FORCE
  • Moishe tries to warn the Jews of Sighet about
    what had happened to him and the threat that was
    coming.
  • 3. RISING ACTION/COMPLICATION
  • Begins later in Chapter 1 when the Germans first
    arrive in Elies community.
  • 4. CLIMAX- occurs when the Jews are running from
    Buna, and Elies father is on the brink of death.
  • 5. FALLING ACTION/DENOUEMENT American forces
    come to Buchenwald to free the prisoners.
  • 6. RESOLUTION is achieved Elie is at last
    free- looks into the mirror

37
Chapter 5
  • 3 Types of irony
  • Verbal Irony a statement in which a character
    says one things but means something else. It is
    typically intentional, is similar to sarcasm.
  • A royal feast going to waste! (Elie on the
    soup..)
  • Dramatic Irony the reader knows more than the
    audience
  • Situational Irony what actually happens is not
    what one would expect or what would be
    appropriate.
  • After the war, I learned the fate of those who
    had remained at the infirmary. They
    were,.liberated by the Russians

38
Chapter 6
  • What are the Jews typically referred to as all
    throughout the memoir?
  • As subhuman, as animals, dogs,swine, pigs-
    powerful imagery, also a MOTIF
  • Other motifs religion, religious traditions, and
    especially the use of the word NIGHT.
  • (Certainly food, too, of course).

39
Chapter 6
  • Zalman Polish boy who is trampled to death
    during the death march
  • Elie Death enveloped me.
  • Strong personification
  • Jews run for at days.
  • One died because one had to . No point in making
    trouble.- understatement
  • All throughout, Elie uses words very minimally to
    make a more powerful statement. Understatement is
    a signature characteristic of modern prose.

40
Chapter 6
  • Theme importance of father-son bonds
  • Rabbi Eliahus son intentionally lost his father
    during the death march, wanted to be rid of him
  • Elie Oh God, Master of the Universe! Give me
    the strength never to do what REs son has
    done!Sons abandoned their fathers w/out a
    tear.
  • Julieks last act- plays a Beethoven concerto-
    loaded w/ symbolism

41
Chapter 7
  • Euphemism- literary practice of using a milder or
    less abrasive form of a negative description
    instead of its original, unsympathetic form.
  • Euphemisms substitute unpleasant and severe words
    with more genteel ones in order to mask
    harshnessThe use of euphemisms is sometimes
    manipulated to lend a touch of exaggeration or
    irony in prose.
  • The label Final Solution is a sanitized
    substitute for the systematic, govt-sponsored
    murder of millions of innocents.

42
Chapter 7
  • Theme importance of father-son bonds continues-
    Elie protects his fathers dying body in the
    cattle car, prevents him from being buried
    half-alive
  • Prisoners who serve as gravediggers- euphemism-
    emphasize how degraded they have all become,
    survival mode at its most dramatic
  • Prisoners are ready to kill for a crust of
    bread.
  • Flashforward Elie cannot bear the sight of the
    Frenchwoman throwing coins into a fountain and
    watching the kids fight over it the sight
    reminds him of the prisoners fighting over the
    food.

43
Chapter 7
  • On their way to Buchenwald in Germany, an
    unidentified man begs his son not to kill him
    over a crust of bread. The son kills the father
    for the bread, and then the son, too, is killed.
  • Elie on the above incident I was sixteen.
  • Understatement- why?
  • A stranger strangles Elie for no reason, most
    likely due to insanity- shows again how they are
    almost not human anymore.
  • Meir Katz- once so physically and mentally
    strong- cannot protect Elie.
  • Chapter ends with their arrival at Buchenwald.

44
Chapter 8
  • Elie begins to become like a father to his own
    weakened father, Shlomo, who suffers from
    dysentery.
  • Elie on his father He had already chosen
    Death
  • -Personification and Foreshadowing
  • Elie compares his father to a child and a
    wounded animal. He compares himself to Rabbi
    Eliahus son. Why?
  • At this point, how are Elie and his father like
    Mrs. Schachter and her son?

45
Chapter 8
  • Elie listens to the advice of the head of the
    block save yourself! Elie does decide to give
    his father soup, but he can only tolerate water.
    Elie feels guilty- and conflicted- about viewing
    his Shlomo as a burden
  • On January 29, 1945, Elie wakes up to find that
    his father has died.
  • Elie on his fathers death Free at last!
  • Why are these words in his consciousness?

46
Chapter 9
  • April 5 SS guards order Jews to gather to
    prepare for liquidation and evacuation of the
    camp
  • Elies first thoughts as a free man- food
  • After the death of Shlomo, nothing mattered.
  • From the depth of the mirror, a corpse was
    contemplating me.
  • Personification

47
Chapter 9
  • Elie refers to himself in the third person. Its
    almost as though the person in the mirror is a
    stranger to him. He cannot recognize himself-
    highly symbolic.

48
The entrance gate to Auschwitz bears the German
words, Arbeit Macht Frei. Work makes you free,
Professor Wiesel translates. And that is the
first ironic statement ever made here.
49
SymbolsThemes
  • Fire
  • Night
  • Eliezers struggle to maintain faith in a
    benevolent God
  • Silence
  • Inhumanity toward other humans
  • The importance of Father-Son bonds

50
Rhetorical Devices
  • Rhetorical Questions
  • The speaker may want to encourage reflection in
    the reader.
  • For example, when Eliezer sees the babies being
    thrown into the fire, he asks a series of
    questions.
  • Was I still alive? Was I awake? How was it
    possible that men, women, and children were being
    burned and that the world kept silent? (p. 32)
  • Eliezer does not expect an answer to these
    questions.
  • He wants the reader to think about what his or
    her reaction might have been in seeing the same
    thing.

51
Figurative language
  • Simile
  • Be certain not to miss the like or as when
    reading the descriptions.
  • For example, when Eliezer describes Mrs.
    Schachter on the train he states she looked
    like a withered tree in a field of wheat. (p.
    25)
  • The image shows a woman who stands alone among
    the people who surround her.
  • She is already dead, as indicated by the word
    withered.

52
Figurative language
  • Personification
  • Personification is used to give human qualities
    to animals or objects.
  • A glacial wind was enveloping us.
  • The stomach alone was measuring time.
  • Jealousy devoured us, consumed us.

53
Figurative language
  • Irony
  • Verbal irony is when someone says one thing and
    means another dramatic irony is when the reader
    knows something that the character does not know
    situational irony is the discrepancy between the
    expected results and the actual results.
  • For example, when Eliezer goes to meet the
    dentist, the dentist has a mouth of yellow,
    rotten teeth. (p. 51)
  • The irony is that a dentist should have mouth of
    perfect teeth.
  • Another example of irony is the inscription that
    is on the iron gate at Auschwitz Work makes
    you free.

54
Figurative Language
  • Foreshadowing
  • Foreshadowing is a literary device that is used
    when the speaker gives hints about what is going
    to happen later in the plot.
  • There are various examples of foreshadowing in
    Night, but they are very subtle.
  • The reader often recognizes them after reading
    further in the text.
  • One of the clearest examples of foreshadowing is
    Mrs. Schächters vision of the fires before the
    prisoners reach the camps.

55
Motifs
  • Throughout Night, Wiesel repeats literary devices
    and images that help to develop the memoirs
    major themes.
  • Notice
  • how night and light are used throughout the text
  • how the Jewish traditions and holidays help to
    pace the memoir and
  • how animal imagery is used to explore the
    dehumanization of the Jews.

56
(No Transcript)
57
The image depicts a deserted street in Sighet's
Jewish ghetto.
just three weeks before the Normandy invasion.
58
The house in Sighet where Wiesel was born
photographed in 2007.
59
Elie Wiesel on his Surviving Family
  • Elie When I was still in Buchenwald, I studied
    the lists of survivors, and my sisters' names
    were not there. That's why I went to France
    otherwise I would have gone back to my hometown
    of Sighet. In France, a clerk in an office at the
    orphanage told me that he had talked with my
    sister, who was looking for me. "That's
    impossible!" I told him. "How would she even know
    I am in France?" But he insisted that she'd told
    him that she would be waiting for me in Paris the
    next day. I didn't sleep that night. The next
    day, I went to Parisand there was my older
    sister! After our liberation, she had gotten
    engaged and gone to France, because she thought I
    was dead too. Then one day she opened the paper
    and saw my picture a journalist had come to the
    orphanage to take pictures and write a story. If
    it hadn't been for that, it may have been years
    before we met. My other sister had gone back to
    our hometown after our release, thinking that I
    might be there. It took almost a year after
    meeting my other sister for us to meet again.

60
Elie Wiesel on his Surviving Family
  • Oprah After living through such an atrocity,
    was it possible for you to be normal againto go
    on with your life?Elie What is abnormal is
    that I am normal. That I survived the Holocaust
    and went on to love beautiful girls, to talk, to
    write, to have toast and tea and live my
    lifethat is what is abnormal.Oprah How did
    what you experienced affect the way you reared
    your son?Elie I let my son choose the moment
    when we would speak about what happened to me. I
    didn't want to imposeI let him develop his own
    curiosity. When I traveled, I often took him with
    me so he could see what my work was about. And
    one day he came to me and said he wanted to go
    back with me to my hometown and the camps.

61
Recognition
  • Wiesel has lived his life speaking out against
    all forms of racism and violence.
  • In 1985 he was awarded the Congressional Medal of
    Freedom and, in 1986, the Nobel Prize for Peace.
  • He is partially responsible for
    the United States Holocaust
    Memorial Museum in
    Washington D.C.

62
U.S. President Barack Obama presents the 2009
National Humanities Medal to Holocaust survivor
Elie Wiesel in the East Room of the White House
on February 25, 2010.
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