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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(3pp) Human nature is compared and contrasted in
the works of Gilgamesh and Elie Wiesel.
Comments are made concerning the readings of this
class; personal remarks are made.
Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBhnat.doc.
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of the writers that we have studied this semester. I was most intrigued by the intense version of Elie Weisels perception of human nature. Largely because he had
endured some of recorded historys most destructive forces, and chose to see them in the nature of his faith. His question to himself was how could all this be
happening in the world if there was a just God, and then he progressed to question even God, and finally transformed these doubts into a infinite faith. Considering himself
a "messenger" of the disasters which has befallen him as well as his faith. Elie Wiesel The grim reality of the annihilation of six million Jews presents a
seemingly insurmountable obstacle to further theological thought: how is it possible to believe in God after what happened? The total of Wiesels work is a passionate effort to break through
this barrier to new understanding and faith. If we believe in the phrase of "trapped in history", then Eliezer Wiesle
would certainly seem to be a prime example. Elie Wiesel was born on Simchat Torah in 1928 and named "Eliezer" after his fathers father. He was the only son
among four children in his family. The father was an intelligent, religious man, a hard-working storekeeper and an important leader in the Jewish community of Sighet. The mother, too, possessed
a warm Hasidic piety and was a cultivated woman. As the only son in a religious family, it would not be unusual for the child to be steeped in
tradition and in fact, From early till late each day, ten or eleven months out of the year, he studied Torah, Talmud, and Kabbalah. He prayed and fasted and eagerly
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