Hope, Despair and Memory: A Young Man in Paris
Hope, Despair and Memory: A Young Man in Paris
Wiesel buries some autobiographical goodness in his Nobel Prize speech—but you might miss this Easter Egg if you don't know what you're looking for. Here it is:
A recollection. The time: After the war. The place: Paris. A young man struggles to readjust to life. (5, 1-4)
That young man in Paris? That's Elie himself.
But, outside of mentioning that it's "a recollection," he never flat-out says that he's giving you a snippet from his life story…because he's not trying to insert himself into the heart of his speech. Instead, he's painting a mental picture, trying to give the audience a tactile sense of what it's like to have lost so much and had to start over with so little.
Man, that Wiesel. He's selfless even when he's talking about himself.