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Why does Wiesel begin "The Perils of Indifference" by thanking the U.S. soldiers who freed him from the concentration camp as a child?

Respuesta :

Maybe because a peril of indifference that happened with Wiesel's situation was that the soldiers who freed them and that experience has fallen into a kind of forgotten obscurity I suppose, in the full of scheme of what happened. 
If the US soldiers didn't free him, then he would have been dead sooner or later, and wouldn't be able to write all the books about his experience in the holocaust as he did today.