In the interview “Am I My Brother’s Keeper” Elie Wiesel places a lot of his responses on his definitions of certain words and phrases. For him the definition of knowledge is different from just information. He says that we know too much and then says that we are informed of to many things. It is not that we actually know too much of anything, but we are in a world where information is just a few keystrokes away. We have the ability to gather information in seconds, but the difference between knowing and being informed is completely different. Wiesel says, “Whether information is transformed into knowledge is a different story.” If we take the overload of information and find something that we can stand for and that we can educate ourselves on through research of the topic, exposure to the topic, or simply finding a way to immerse ourselves in that ‘something’, then we will have transformed some simple ‘information’ into ‘knowledge’.
Responsibility is another word Wiesel puts some stress on. He says that it is up to us as ‘brothers’ and sisters to take the information given to us about things going wrong in the world, whether from natural disasters, civil wars, terrorist acts, etc. and make them our responsibility. He says that in this world, we are either brothers or we are strangers. To me it would be impossible to leave a brother or sister in need of something that I can give. He says that because he has that knowledge then he “must keep [his] brother.” With a world again where information is given to us in tons, we should be able to look for our ‘brothers’ whether it is a friend in need, a person at our school who may need help of some kind, or a family in Africa, we should strive to keep our brothers and sisters.
Presence was significantly related to responsibility in my views, because Wiesel says that he “urges his students to be present when someone is in need of a human presence.” Again it falls under our responsibility as compassionate human beings to strive to be the presence people fall on when they are suffering. I agree with his statement that when you suffer, you need a presence, because when a time of suffering is there, knowing that you are not alone and have someone there willing to take the responsibility to be there with you makes a difference beyond compare.