48 Friday, March 14, 1986 THE DETROIT. JEWISH NEWS SILENCE. Elie Wiesel is obsessed with it. He has his reasons. When the Jews needed the world to speak, the world was silent. A silence that helped kill six million Jews, forever silent. Which is why Wiesel, one of those Jews who survived, is obsessed. "He is a driven Irian," says Irving Abraham- son. "He's always working, he never stands still. He's obsessed with the need to tell the tale, to be a messenger from the dead to the living." And so Wiesel„ author, teacher, memorialist of the Holocaust, has spent the last thirty years of his life fight- ing silence. By talking, by writing. ' Thirty years of w Elie Wiesel: Jews build words, not statues. . Abrahamson: preserving and pro- tecting Wiesel's words. .A Chicago academic s ten-year effort to compile Elie Wiesel's written and spoken words has come to fruition in a lthree volume publication. "Jews have never believed in statues, we have never believed in buildings," he has noted.. "Judaism is words, Jewish building is in words, we build words. The only way for us to communicate what happened in the past is through words, whether of past glory or of past disaster. Only words." Words Abrahamson has been collecting. For the last decade, Abra- hanison, a professor of English at the City Colleges of Chicago, has been tracking down Wiesel's words. Every article, every short story, every poem, every book pre- face, every book review, every essay. Every public wor,d, other than his .26 esel is ever books, that Wiesel written. And not just eve word • he's written but eve public word he's tittered Every speech, every lect e, every interview, every ommen- tary. Every word. I cluding a one-act play and t o televi- sion scripts. That effort. has resulted in Against Silence: • The Voice 4 ■ 0* te,* ■ •• k . 4