The more cruel the wrong that men commit against an individual or a people, the deeper their hatred and contempt for their victim. Conceit and false pride on the part of a nation prevent the rise of remorse for its crime.

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Probable attribution

A source trail connects this quotation to Albert Einstein and Essays in Humanism, but the exact English wording has not been confirmed in a primary text. The attribution is therefore probable rather than definitive.

Likely origin: Essays in Humanism

About this quote

This page records the wording "The more cruel the wrong that men commit against an…," which centers on cruel, wrong, commit. A concrete trail points toward Einstein, but the exact English form remains unconfirmed; the page therefore labels it as attributed to him while preserving its creativity and life context.

When to use it

  • Use "The more cruel the wrong that men commit against an…" in a creativity discussion, then ask which concrete claim the wording makes.
  • Compare its treatment of cruel with wrong in a lesson, essay, or editorial note before drawing a conclusion.
  • Before sharing it as Einstein's exact words, display the attribution caveat and follow the evidence link recorded on the page.