In the Bible: Noah - The 92nd Street Y, New York

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The Elie Wiesel Living Archive

at The 92nd Street Y, New York Supported by The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity

In the Bible: Noah

The Gratitude of a Survivor
Oct 14, 1982

Until now we’ve studied personalities. This year we’ll also study events. What is the uniqueness of Noah that God chose him? The reason has to do not with before or after the flood but during. All Noah wanted was to serve as a living example. To see him was to know that he had heard God’s warnings, as others must have. Yet he was the only one who decided to act. And then in the aftermath Noah was confronted by a choice: anger at what he lost, or gratitude for survival? He chose gratitude, and offered thanks to heaven. No one is as grateful as a survivor. Every moment means grace, for one could have been in someone else’s place.

Selected Quotations:

It was as though God was choosing to tell a strange, surrealistic tale--a tale in which the epilogue and the prologue almost touched, leaving nothing in between. (00:00:29)

-Elie Wiesel

The text is about a total event, and therefore it is in itself a total description encompassing the universe in its entirety. (00:07:36)

-Elie Wiesel

And that is the profound beauty of Scripture: its characters are not mythical; their adventures are not imaginary for we enact them again and again; they vibrate with life, our life, and thus compel us to approach them, to enter their vision and search for a common meaning. (00:16:45)

-Elie Wiesel

God did not resent their lack of religious faith as much he resented their lack of respect for one another. (00:35:47)

-Elie Wiesel

Poor Noah: he was in fact the object of his own story rather than its subject. (00:44:10)

-Elie Wiesel

All he wanted was to serve as a living example. (01:00:54)

-Elie Wiesel

What was special about him was that he turned awareness into action. (01:01:11)

-Elie Wiesel

No one is as grateful as a survivor. He or she knows that every moment means grace, for he or she could have been in another’s place, another who is gone. (01:06:40)

-Elie Wiesel
Subthemes:
        1) Beginning at the End: The end of all flesh
2) 16 years at 92Y and Modern-Day Anti-Semitism
3) Modern-day anti-Semitism in France
4) How Noah Plays Out on a Modern Stage
5) Noah: A Just Man of His Generations
6) The Influence of Lamech, Noah’s Father
7) Grace in the Eyes of God
8) A Flashback to Righteousness, Purity, and Obedience
9) The Talmud and Midrash
10) Did the Flood Change Noah: Noah’s Life Post-Flood
11) Partnership with Satan at the Vineyard
12) Noah: Springing Into Action
13) A Mark for the Mockery of his Fellow Men
14) Caring for All of the Creatures Upon the Ark
15) The Gratitude of a Survivor

Tags: Elie Wiesel