For my first entry I chose a quote between the pages of one and forty-four, “Things changed rapidly in a matter of seconds and no one had any control over anything. We had yet to learn these things and implement survival tactics, which was what it came down to. That night we were so hungry that we stole people’s food while they slept. It was the only way to get through the night” (29).This part of the book takes place at the end of chapter 4, and I thought this was a very interesting part. In this excerpt Ishmael and his friends steal food after no one would sell or give food to them. He says it was the only way to get through the night. I thought this was intriguing because up to this point Ishmael and his friends were very innocent kids and I would never imagine them doing something so scandalous. I believe that the aspect of war is starting to get to him. After writing this I want to know if you think Ishmael would …show more content…
Everyone else was crying, but I couldn’t cry. I felt dizzy and my eyes watered. My hands began shaking again. I felt the warmth inside my stomach, and my heart was beating slowly but at a heavy rate.” (89). When I read that Ishmael didn’t cry it really surprised me. It is even said later on in the book that Saidu felt like family to not only him but the whole group. The excerpt says that he can’t cry. I believe that the war has gotten to his head and changed his perspective on the world. Through all the hardships he has been through I feel as if he has changed and is trying to be stronger. He sees the world in a more black in white color know and deep emotions is something that he is slowly losing. After you read about this do you think these hardships are helping him in the sense that they are making him a much stronger and independent person? Or do you fell as if the hardships are making him worse and ruing the quality of
The mother clung to her child and rocked her. She was in too much pain and shock to shed tears.” This excerpt “plagued” Ishmael’s mind as he put it and brought to the boys attention that there was no possible way their families could still be in Mogbwemo and that they needed to return to Mattru Jong for safety. This is definitely a key passage because before this point, Ishmael had no real understanding of the gruesome, violent, and upsetting occurrences that war brought. He had never experienced war in real life and wasn’t used to it at all.
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.
Ishamael Beah’s resilience allowed him to be adaptable to many different and difficult situations. In the beginning of the book Ishmael and his friends decide to go to Mattru Jong for a talent show. As they begin to go there they hear that the war has hit the mining areas. Ishmael and his friends knew that they may never be able to find their families again. Ishmael adapted very quickly and never gave up on trying to find them. “For more than three hours, we stayed at the Wharf, anxiously waiting and expecting to see our families or to talk to someone who had seen them.” (Beah 10) They never heard any news of them. Ishmael, Junior, Talloi begin to travel back saying goodbye to their friends. Ismael and they boys saw their first look, at what the war was about. They saw blood everywhere, parents carrying their dead children and people in pain. As Ismael, Junior and Talloi traveled
Ishmael showed perseverance during his time in the war when in his memoir “ A Long Way Gone” it stated on page 179 “ Leslie had told me that I was to be “repatriated” and reinstated into normal society. I was to live with my uncle. Those two weeks felt longer than the eight months I had spent at the Benin Home” showing that he had only spent eight months getting over everything he went through in the war in two years , therefore it showed how much he could overcome in such little time and how he went through very difficult things in a matter time and still had perseverance through it all. Another example of how he had perseverance was stated in the book on page 88 “ We were leaving our friend, or as my grandmother would put it, “ His temporary journey in the world had ended.” We on the other hand had to continue.”Showing how hard it was for Ishmael to have to keep going on but still continued
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`s hope for a better life portrays one example of the theme “Always have hope”. The war was very traumatic for everyone in the country. In fact, Ishmael joined the army at only 12 years old. While fighting in the war, Ishmael recalled his family and the wisdom they left with him. For example, Ishmael`s father said, “If there is nothing good left in the destiny of a person he or she will die” (Beah54). Ishmael holds on to his father`s words as they comfort him and divert his attention away from the war around him. He could`ve given up many times during the journey. Instead, Ishmael does not lose hope and continues to move on because he knows that life will get better.
What would Ishmael’s grandfather give him and his brother? Explain how this impacted him. What if we had this, how would it impact the world?
Paragraph 1 tone : He seems nervous about this trip He says ,“We’ve all been up since midnight, starting our predive checks after a couple of restless hours of sleep, and the whole team is running on adrenaline. These are the roughest conditions I’ve dived in so far on the expedition” The way he says that they’ve been up the whole night doing checks without sleep and how this is one of the roughest conditions he has dived in so far just gives the sense of nervousness if he will make the challenge.
Chapter 5: Paul explains about how unsanitary the camps are, explaining that he and his friends had gotten louses (lice) in their head, and they try to attempt to get it off. Haie tries to cheer up the rest of the soldiers by telling them that he might have got the lice from the hospital, but he is the one who laugh the most, for 30 minutes straight. After trying to get the lice off themselves, they hear that Himmelstoss got in trouble for harassing the soldiers, and the magistrate’s son caught him in the action. Hearing the news that Himmelstoss got in trouble for his wrongdoings, Paul and the rest of the group start planning out what they should do or say to Himmelstoss when he comes back to the camp. When talking about what they should do
The main character in the story is Juan. Juan is a slave that was born in Spain. Juan is a slave with a black mother and a spanish father. When his mother dies when he is 5 he is a little slave assistant type of person for a lady. The only things that Juan has left of his mother is an earing that his father gave to his mother as a gift that Juan wears all the time. His mistress taught him to read and write to her relatives. The plaque eventually spread and she died and he surprisingly survived the disease.
Pg 379- “In Sugamo prison, as he was told of Wantanbe’s fate, all Louie saw was a lost person, a life now beyond redemption. HE felt something that he had never felt for his captor before. With a shiver of amazement, he realized that it was compassion.”
Throughout it all, Ishmael leads his pupil through his trials with wit and wisdom, even while leading him towards solutions for world hunger and environmental destruction. Makes one wonder how it is that Quinn, as he claims, arrived at all of the conclusions in the book by simply going to the library and doing a little research. Part parable, part myth, and totally compelling, Ishmael leaves one hungry and wondering, waiting for the next chapter of humanity's tale to play out. As any good book does, Ishmael leaves readers with more questions than answers, and demands that the reader figure out the solution for himself.
In chapter 72, is based off of Ishmael and Queequeg working together to catch and slaughter the whale stubb as a team. Ishmael goes into great detail of how he and Queequeg are going to get this whale together and what process and steps they took in order of capturing the whale to be successful. Ishmael states “It was a humorously perilous business for both of us. For, before we proceed further, it must be said that the monkey-rope was fast at both ends; fast to Queequeg’s broad canvas belt, and fast to my narrow leather one. So that for better or for worse, we two, for the time, were wedded; and should poor Queequeg sink to rise no more, then both usage and honor demanded, that instead of cutting the cord, it should drag me down in his wake.
I was shocked at first when I read this passage because of the tragic events that has happened to this man. As a result I felt extremely sorry that, that has happened to him. However, seeing him answering Liesel's question so bravely, I feel a spark of respect to him because many people doesn't like to talk about their past, especially about the tragic events. For example, when my father injured his hand at work, I kept asking him how he injured it, but no matter how many times I asked, I wasn’t able to get an answer. Instead, he would change the topic immediately. All in all I am extremely proud of this man in the
Ishmael is without a doubt someone who has a lot of experience and therefore wisdom. He preaches about how his experiences in his lifetime have led him to see the true ways of the evils of the Takers. He even has enough nerve to say he knows so much that he puts an ad in the paper looking to “enlighten” someone else. But, Ishmael is completely biased to a Leaver viewpoint only. Even though he has a lot of experience, he has none or will never have any from the Taker’s point of view.