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Nobel
Peace Prize winner and BU Professor ELIE WIESEL has worked
on behalf of oppressed people for much of his adult life.
His personal experience of the Holocaust has led him to
use his talents as an author, teacher and storyteller to
defend human rights and peace throughout the world. His
more than forty books have won numerous awards, including
the Prix Médicis for A Beggar in Jerusalem,
the Prix Livre Inter for The Testament, and the
Grand Prize for Literature from the City of Paris for The
Fifth Son. He has written two volumes of memoirs, All
Rivers Run to the Sea and And the Sea is Never
Full. After the war, Wiesel studied in Paris and later
became a journalist in that city, remaining silent, however,
about what he had endured in the death camps. During an
interview with the French writer François Mauriac,
Wiesel was persuaded to end that silence. He subsequently
wrote La Nuit (Night), which has been
translated into thirty languages and has sold millions of
copies since its 1958 publication. Since 1976, Wiesel has
been the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities at
BU, where he also holds the title of University Professor.
He is a member of the faculty in the Departments of Philosophy
and Religion. Please
visit the website of American
Public Media to listen to Professor Wiesel discuss the
Tragedy of the Believers.

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