What did A Long Way Gone teach you from a historical perspective? What did Ishmael’s personal history communicate to you about the recent history of his homeland? At first I was very suprised that Ishamel was having to deal with such devistating events. I thought about myself in his position and taken back by how much strength he had top fight through the war without his family. I remembered that in troubled counties with such a large rate of poverty that war is an occurence that countinously goes on. A long way gone has taught me that War still goes on in Sierra Leone yet half of the world is clueless as to what is actually happening. Ishmael taught me that children fighting in the war was also an occurence that was not thought about twice. …show more content…
Do you think it’s important to see positivity in his story, or should we simply accept it as a bleak story of a lost childhood? I believe that there is positivity in Ishmael’s story. He grew up in such a troubled country and fought through a war. Most kids cannot tell the same story that Ishmael recites today. Ishmael has grown as a braver and mentally stronger person after goigng through everything. Ishmael did not especially lose his childhood, he just has a different story than the rest. Add 1-2 of your own questions. Ishmael constantly states when walking village to village with a pack, that traveling in groups can be dangerous and more difficult. He believes that more people cause more stares and untrustworthyness as him and his friends enter a village. However, there are benifits to travel with someone such as company. Do you think Ishmael would have perfered to travel alone or with a pack? Imagine Ishmael did not get rescued by the UNICEF. What do you think Ishmaels life would be like? Do you think he would continue being a child soldier or do you believe that with the strength he alreadys obtained, he will perservere and find a way to
I find the fact that they were able to even smile during this morbid time was extremely uplifting. To still have such spirit when so much had been taken away from them is astonishing. This shows so much character in Ishmael, how he does not let the war get to his head. He still preserves whatever happiness he has left. It is so important not to take life for granted, as shown in this memoir. In one instant Ishmael was a boy, in another he was a boy soldier. He manages to find joy in a terrible time.
A Long Way Gone is a novel written by Ishmael Beah. He’s a child who lost everything extremely valuable to him, due to war. Ishmael uses imagery, descriptive writing, and emotions to show the challenges it took to survive the war. As the war goes on, Ishmael describes the changes of how Mogbwemo, the village he was raised in, and his neighborhood, of how it went from peaceful to violence, and how the war had impact him and the people of Sierra Leone.
The book is based on actual events and is expressed through a personal point of view. Ishmael wrote a memoir that tells the story of a young boy who is torn from his peaceful life, and then forced into a frightening world of drugs and slavery. In writing about his experiences, he has made the decision to present his experiences in a particular way by missing out details and recounting others. This
The more people Ishmael loses, the less he has to fight for- the less he has to hope for. Upon finding his family’s ashes, Ishmael is enraged- not hopeless. Ishmael’s hope is alive, but shrinking as Gasemu indicates when he says, “Your forehead used to glow naturally when you were just a child … We thought it was because you were happy all the time. Your mother said you even smiled when you slept. But when you started your troublesomeness and were angry, your forehead glowed even more…And here you are, it isn’t shining anymore,” (Beah 92). Ishmael’s forehead did not glow because he was mad or sad or embarrassed or happy. Ishmael’s forehead glowed because he was passionate and hopeful. The angrier he got when he was younger, the more his forehead glowed seeing as he believed in his anger. Despite the fact that his hope shrank when he was faced with the death of his family, the threat of the rebels, and the fear of dying, these events did not destroy Ishmael’s hope- Ismael’s hope begins its descent to nothingness when he becomes a child soldier and, consequently, a drug addict. When Ishmael no longer mourns the death of human life, his hope is lost. When Ishmael cannot care less if he lives or dies, his hope is lost. When he would rather continue killing as
Ishmael wants American readers to know that war is brutal. Americans tend to romanticize war. They believe war involves people committing great acts of heroism and bravery while fighting to protect the love of their life. Ishmael knows that is not what war is like. There is no romance; and there is no heroism involved in war. It is terrible people doing terrible things. War takes humanity away from people. They turn into animals who just kill and torture people. Everyone else is running away from the war just to have the war catch up to them. Americans do not see the honest truth of war, and Ishmael wanted to change that by telling his story of war.
In the story, A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah, Ishmael’s life experiences while escaping the war show how everything in life should be cherished, because one day those great features are there but they can easily be taken away. Ishmael Beah has experienced the traumatizing effect of war and how it can tear someone apart and morph them into a completely different person. This happened to Ishmael himself. He was brainwashed and his mind was molded into believing that revenge is the answer to the deaths of his family members. This essentially is why he puts his safety and wellbeing at risk. He goes from being a twelve year old boy who heard stories of the war, but never imagined it chasing after him, to running away from this inescapable war only
In the book, A Long Way Gone, there is an array of different tones. The author uses them to shine light on the central theme and main idea of the story. The tone is important because it emphasizes the emotion of the text and the story being told. The author, Ishmael Beah, who is also the main character in the book has had a rough life. He grew up in the city of Mattru Jong, which is in the country of Sierra Leone. War had swept over the land changing everything and everyone. Beah was forced into being a child soldier at the age of twelve. By looking at the book, A Long Way Gone, one can see that Beah was put through things that no person should go through and it has shaped his entire world, with death, loss, and pain.
“If you are alive, there is hope for a better day and something good to happen...” (pg. 54). Throughout the course of A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah, we familiarize ourselves with the exceptional hardships that Ishmael has experienced as a child soldier, in Sierra Leone, and what actions he takes to overcome them. Despite the fact that Ishmael has been through these devastating hardships and that he became the fear that he himself feared, Ishmael is able to instill hope and keep the reader going through the themes of powerful memories, nature and redemption. He does this through the use of powerful memories that contrast the fear and danger of the war with the remembrance of the beauty of life. Furthermore, nature leaves the reader striving
“He never said anything back then and didn’t get upset by what they said.” (Beah, 2007, p. 91) Living freely, this man is a spirited human, not suffering but taking the pain. Pleasant people in ‘A Long Way Gone” are the selfless, secure souls. Next, on page 119, Ishmael remarks “I was not afraid of the lifeless bodies. I despised them and kicked them to flip them.” At the front lines of his first battle as a soldier, trained to fight and through with living fearfully. The water rises and Ishmael builds his wall. Also, on page 187 Ishmael utilizes brutal honesty with his interviewer, never questioning himself, “I meant what I said and it was not a funny matter.” Embodying the confidence of someone choosing to stay when everyone else runs, surviving the war. In conclusion “I Lived” by OneRepublic (2013) the pinnacle of connections between the real world and literary devices in A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah (2007), reflecting the significance of courage and all it can get you
beginning of A Long Way Gone Ishmael was terrified of guns. He didn't want anything to do with them. But once he started in
In the introduction of A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah, he writes, “There were all kinds of stories told about the war that made it sound as if it was happening in a faraway and different land. It wasn’t until refugees started passing through our town that we began to see that it was actually taking place in our country” (Beah 1). During this statement Beah says that he is completely oblivious to the war around him. These people living in Sierra Leone had adapted to the war to the point where their perception had been altered. With this memoir he shares his experiences and obstacles he faces throughout the war to become a beckon of hope in this despairing country. Ishmael uses his social skills, timely luck, and emotional strength, to find the courage to overcome these adversities and survive in and out of the war.
A final theme tells us when everything else disappears, there is always love. Ishmael learns this the hard way. He has a kind of family unit with the soldiers that actually carries over into the love and friendship between him and Alhaji. Then, there is the love of Uncle Tommy and his family and their willingness to make Ishmael a son and a brother. Finally, there is the love of people like Esther and Laura who accept him unconditionally and welcome him into their homes when he most needed help and love.
During his time at Bennin home Esther may have helped him some but in the end he needed to connect to his family someone who knew him before the war. “I got up and hugged my uncle he embraced me harder than he had the first time and kissed my forehead” (Beah 172) this shows that even though he s was a child soldier his uncle still accepts him and want to be there for him. “I had gotten to know my uncle well during our walks and began to eagerly await his arrival on the weekends” (Beah 176) because of the connection he and his uncle made Ishmael starts to open up more and feel more emotions. “The ceremony marks the first stage of a complex program aimed at releasing children from the LTTE and bringing them back to their families, implemented under the Action Plan approved by the Government and LTTE in August 2003. Forty-nine former child soldiers (27 girls and 22 boys) have been placed in the transit centre in Kilinochchi in the severely war-affected north east of the island.” This piece from this article shows that there are outside forces at play trying to find child soldier and have them reconnect to their families and also to help take care of and treat the child soldier for any injuries they might have either mental of
The entire time I was thinking how someone, like Ishmael, who had gone through so much, would be able to handle such a traumatic experience. Not only would it be terrifying and heartbreaking to tell the story, but to share it with the whole world in a book is just unbearable. Watching the video, I was so emotion and I could not handle it. I found at times I had to pause the video and take a deep breath and just sit. I could not continue until I had calmed myself. There is something about his story that does not sit right with me. He talked about the exhibition killings and how the only way he found it settling was when he was on drugs. Hearing him speak about all the different drugs in his system, and knowing the effects of them are terrifying.
While not fully healed, Ishmael is on his way; alone, but also alive – he is hopeless, but relieved. Ishmael’s story is told, and in it, a new acknowledgment of human nature is found, for one first needs a family to be an