Facing hate

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Date
1991
Summary
Elie Wiesel helps probe the logic of hatred as expressed in books, religion, history and personal experience. When he was 15, his family perished in the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz. As he has struggled to understand hatred and its role in contemporary world affairs, he has become a prolific writer, a leader in the worldwide cause of human rights and the winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize.
Contributors
Moyers, Bill D.; Wiesel, Elie 1928
Publishers
International Cultural Programming, Inc; Public Affairs Television (Firm); Films for the Humanities (Firm)
Subjects
War, Military; War and International Conflicts; Hate; Prejudices; Hate crimes; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Personal narratives; Holocaust survivors
Locations
North America; United States
Collection
Films@UM
Unit
Distinctive Media Collections
Language
English
Rights Statement
In Copyright
Terms of Use
Access is restricted to patrons at the University of Maryland.
Physical Description
58 minutes; color
Notes

Access

Access condition: campus-only.

Creation/Production Credits

Participants: Bill Moyers, Elie Wiesel.
Other Identifiers
Filename: lms-090142; Fedora 2 PID: umd:1730; Handle Identifier: hdl:1903.1/987; OCLC: ocm36779598; Catalog Key: alephsys002359187; Catalog Key: FFH 6776

Access Restrictions

This item is accessible by: collection staff, users in specific IP Ranges.