laerica
laerica
18.03.2020 • 
English

"And then, one day all foreign Jews were expelled from Sighet," writes Wiesel, quite bluntly. "And Moishe the Beadle was a foreigner." Why do you suppose the shocking information is delivered so matter-of-factly? What is the point of Wiesel's abruptness? Also consider the manner in which Moishe is treated by the Jew of Sighet after he escaped the gestapo capture. Are the people happy to see him? Is he himself happy to be alive? Explain why Moishe has returned to the village. Why don't the Jewish towns people believe the horrible news he brings back to them?

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