Information for "Night"

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Display titleNight
Default sort keyNight
Page length (in bytes)4,710
Namespace ID0
Page ID110706
Page content languageen - English
Page content modelwikitext
Indexing by robotsAllowed
Number of redirects to this page0
Counted as a content pageYes
Number of subpages of this page1 (0 redirects; 1 non-redirect)

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Page creatorm>Import Bot
Date of page creation21:27, 1 November 2013
Latest editorRobkelk (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit00:58, 31 March 2015
Total number of edits9
Recent number of edits (within past 180 days)0
Recent number of distinct authors0

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On April 11, 1945, the Buchenwald concentration camp was liberated, and among the freed inmates was a young man named Elie Wiesel. He had lost his father, his mother, and one of his sisters. For a decade he worked as a journalist and refused to even discuss the Holocaust. In 1954, he poured his experiences into an eight-hundred-page book and called it And the World Remained Silent, but the public was generally apathetic. Then in 1955, he interviewed the Christian (and Christ-obsessed) novelist Francois Mauriac, with the results described in the page quote, and with Mauriac's help he published a greatly abridged edition in France, then America, calling it La Nuit or Night.
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