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Fanatics: Will they Ever Come To Their Senses? Fanatics: Will They Ever
Come to Their Senses? In Elie Wiesel’s essay titled “How ...
... People who are design fanatics use such hot ... Branding now has become more important
than ever. ... Unlike their competitors, they create together without the rules ...
... Ikemefuna and Nwoye are as inseparable as ever, and because Ikemefuna treats Nwoye ...
Under him, fanatics like Enoch flourish ... They must resist before it is too late ...
Submitted by kdrais063 on April 6, 2006
Category: Book Reports
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Fanatics: Will They Ever Come to Their Senses?
In Elie Wiesel’s essay titled “How Can We Understand Their Hatred?” Wiesel asks a very important question, “After the horrors of the last century, how can fanaticism still hold strong today, and will it ever completely end?” The essay goes on to explain how our last century was ravaged with intellectual and physical hatred, for example when Stalin used terror just as Hitler used death to oppress people (Wiesel 172). Wiesel wonders why, after the tragedy on September 11, 2001, fanaticism still holds sway.
At the beginning of his essay, Wiesel states that fanaticism has been around longer than all of the other words that end in “ism” and debates whether fanaticism will ever really disappear. He goes on to describe a true fanatic’s actions and thoughts. This article was written in 2002 and was published in the April 7, 2002 issue of Parade magazine. Elie Wiesel, now a passionate spokesman for compassionate understanding and human rights, was captured at the age of 16 and sent to Auschwitz and was liberated in April 1945. He also wrote Night, a very powerful book describing his experiences in the concentration camp. Wiesel was appointed chair of the Presidential Commission of the Holocaust and was awarded the Congressional Medal of Achievement in 1985. He was also awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 for his speaking and various writings.
In “How Can We Understand Their Hatred?” the clear reason for Wiesel to write this piece is to analyze the ideas of fanatics and fanaticism as a whole. Beginning in the first paragraph, he describes the background of fanaticism and how in the ancient times fanatics were more linked to religious experience. The act of fanaticism was entertaining to the people then, but today it carries a bad connotation. Fanaticism is appealing because it makes the fanatic feel less alone (Wiesel 173). In the next few paragraphs, Wiesel describes the fanatic...
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