Metro Examining Reconciliation Elie Wiesel covers new ground with speech at Rochester College. Judith Doner Berne Special to the Jewish News A standing ovation in the sold- out Rochester Church of Christ Auditorium both greeted and followed the appearance of Nobel Peace Prize recipient, human rights advocate and writer-philosopher Elie Wiesel last Thursday night, Aug. 21. Wiesel, whose best-known book Night described the horrors of the two concen- tration camps he survived, spoke on "The Power of Language for Reconciliation" to a rapt audience of more than 800 at the event sponsored by Rochester College. "We ask you tonight to be our teacher; we ask you tonight to be our rabbi:' said Dr. John Barton, vice president of aca- demic affairs, who had invited Wiesel to give a special lecture to mark the 50-year anniversary of the small Christian school tucked away in Rochester. "John, dear John Barton, was very demanding;' Wiesel said. "It should be a new lecture. He gave me so many ques- tions. He gave me work." Wiesel, who teaches philosophy at Boston University, didn't tie up his thoughts in neat packages. Often he responded with questions of his own, using the Socratic method that posits that by posing questions through a dialogue or dialectic you can work toward a higher truth. "Good questions," Wiesel said, "are bet- ter than good answers. Questions unite; answers divide. "Reconciliation has a lofty sound:' he began. "It implies a disagreement" The first disagreements appear in Scripture — without reconciliation, he recounted. God punishes Adam and Eve, who opened their eyes and felt shame. Their sons Cain and Abel fought, with Cain murdering his brother. "Their parents probably overheard them from the kitchen;' Wiesel said. But, more seriously, he asked, "Where were their parents? Why didn't they speak? It was the first failure of education. "Life is so sacred; no one has the right to violate it or eliminate it. I can be recon- ciled with my death but not yours." Question: Is reconciliation always attainable or necessarily desirable? "I will not give a blanket pardon to Nazi perpetrators," Wiesel said. "The dead alone possess that right" That doesn't mean, he quickly added, that the children and grandchildren of wrongdoers must pay. "Only the guilty are guilty — their children are not." Question: Can there be forgiveness with reconciliation? Yes, with a caveat. Wiesel gave positive examples, such as the relationships now enjoyed by former enemies such as France and Germany or Norway and Sweden. "But it must never be at the expense of memory;' he said. "Without memory, all initiatives are doomed. "I devoted my life to celebrate memory:' Wiesel said. `Alzheimer's means total despair. It is cancer of identity: Every day you tear out a page. What remains — the covers. What if a whole generation suffers from Alzheimer's?" It took him 10 years, he said, to write about his experience in the concentration camps. "I was afraid I wouldn't have the proper words to communicate what we went through. I wrote because I had no moral choice." Question: Is language more than words? "Even God needed language to create the world," Wiesel said. "Whether words or written or spoken, we are responsible for their impact. Since my childhood, I learned to respect language. To abuse words is danger- ous." During war or other extreme sit- uations we real- ize the frailty of language, Wiesel said. "Language is its first victim. Both Stalin and Hitler made lan- guage their obedient captive. Who hates one group hates all groups." He was shocked, he said, when he saw the way black people were treated on his first trip to the southern United States. "I felt shame. I never felt shame as a Jew but I felt shame for being white." Just as language precedes war, Wiesel said, language helps reconciliation. Question: What happens when, in the name of God, certain crimes are being committed? What do you do then? The dialogue toward reconciliation Elie Wiesel: "i devoted my life to celebrate memory." between Catholics and Jews, begun by Pope John XXIII and advanced by Pope John Paul II, falls short, Wiesel said. "They forgot to take the third partner — Islam — which they should have done right away. Maybe if they had done it then, maybe it could have prevented certain crimes being committed today. "I can't believe Wiesel said, that God wants his chil- dren to fight one another. We know, because God listened to Moses, that God listens. "It's all a question of what we tell him for what reasons." Question: Will the power of language alone be enough to achieve peace? "I believe today art, including literature, is here to help us overcome the obstacles before us," he said. Perhaps he had in mind the New York Philharmonic Orchestra's recent concert in North Korea. "My fellow friends with me in the camps:' he said, nodding toward several Holocaust survivors in the audience, "will tell you we had an absolute right to say to "Good questions are better than good answers. Questions unite; answers divide." the world,`Goodbye. You weren't there. You didn't come to help us. Mr. God, goodbye. You let me down.'" But "we didn't use that right. It is because we suffered, we want other people to be saved from suffering." Question: Is this a reason for going on? "Yes." Rochester College President Rubel Shelley named Wiesel an honorary visit- ing professor of humanities. He also has received more than 120 honorary degrees from other institutions of higher learning in the United States, Europe and Israel. Earlier in the evening, the college feted Wiesel and other Holocaust survivors at a dinner. "It was a kosher meal at a Christian college with a rabbi's benediction:' the col- lege president rather proudly announced. Rochester College students Majeema Thomas and Justin McMahan remained in their last-row seats after most of the audi- ence had left. "I think it was a great start to our 50th anniversary:' said Thomas, a sophomore who is student body president. "This is a highlight of my year." "I was very intrigued by what he went through:' McMahan, a freshman, said. "For this to happen here in my first semester is very exciting." ❑ 3N August 28 • 2008 A21