Bill Moyers interviews Elie Wiesel who probes the logic of hatred as expressed in books, religion, history and personal experience. When Wiesel was 15, his family perished in the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. As he has struggled to understand hatred and its role in contemporary world affairs, he has become a prolific writer, a leader in the worldwide cause of human rights. and the winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize.
"Bill Moyers interviews Elie Wiesel who probes the logic of hatred as expressed in books, religion, history and personal experience. When Wiesel was 15, his family perished in the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. As he has struggled to understand hatred and its role in contemporary world affairs, he has become a prolific writer, a leader in the worldwide cause of human rights. and the winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize."
"Bill Moyers interviews Elie Wiesel who probes the logic of hatred as expressed in books, religion, history and personal experience. When Wiesel was 15, his family perished in the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. As he has struggled to understand hatred and its role in contemporary world affairs, he has become a prolific writer, a leader in the worldwide cause of human rights. and the winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize."@en
"Nobel Laureate and human rights advocate Elie Wiesel talks with Bill Moyers about his own childhood experiences at Auschwitz and analyzes the source of Nazi hatred toward Jews. Wiesel reflects on his own apparent inability to hate and discusses ethnic hatred at work in Bosnia and other Eastern European countries since the end of the cold War."
"Elie Wiesel helps probe the logic of hatred as expressed in books, religion, history and personal experience. When he was 15, his family perished in the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. As he has struggled to understand hatred and its role in contemporary world affairs, he has become a prolific writer, a leader in the worldwide cause of human rights, and the winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize."
"Elie Wiesel helps probe the logic of hatred as expressed in books, religion, history and personal experience. When he was 15, his family perished in the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. As he has struggled to understand hatred and its role in contemporary world affairs, he has become a prolific writer, a leader in the worldwide cause of human rights, and the winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize."@en
"Nobel Laureate and human rights advocate Elie Wiesel talks with Bill Moyers about his own childhood experiences at Auschwitz and analyzes the source of Nazi hatred toward Jews."@en
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