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Read the excerpt from Wiesel’s All Rivers Run to the Sea. No, let us go no further. Decency and custom forbid it. I said it earlier, when speaking of my grandfather: In Jewish tradition a man’s death belongs to him alone. Let the gas chambers remain closed to prying eyes, and to the imagination. We will never know all that happened behind those doors of steel. Read the text and study the images from Spiegelman’s Maus. Which theme is addressed in both excerpts? Inexperience can sometimes lead to misunderstanding. It’s important to follow tradition regardless of circumstance. Some truths are too difficult to fathom if one has not experienced them. There are times when one must be able to see in order to believe

User Leonel
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6 votes

the answer is c mate

User Arthurakay
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The correct answer is C. Some truths are too difficult to fathom if one has not experienced them.

Elie Wiesel(1928-2016), was a Jewish writer that survived the Holocaust. He moved to New York in 1955 and became an activist of social injustices.

As a writer, he wrote "Night"(1958) and "All Rivers Run to the See"(1995).

Wiesel won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986.

User Martin Verjans
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