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Telling The Pets In The Help By Kathryn Stockett

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“No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to be the human heart than its opposite” (Mandea). Nelson Mandela was a south African anti-apartheid revolutionary and politician who served as president of South Africa from 1994 to 1999. He inspired many people by spreading love and also he wanted equality just like African-American maids in the book The Help.
The Help written by Kathryn Stockett is about a white woman, Skeeter with the help of the maids, writes a novel about what it is like to work for white families and raise their children. Telling the maids’ point of views …show more content…

The mothers had were having a hard time handling their lives. The letter also leads Skeeter to deduce that it was wrong for Hilly to send Yule May to prison that it was for Yule May was to steal Hilly’s ring, which eventually leads to the end of the friendship between Hilly and Skeeter. The help shows the inner workings of a segregated society against the backdrop of the growing US Civil rights Movement in the 1960’s. Although there is some variety in economic and social class, race is the number one determinant of a person’s place in the author.
Even though racism still continues today, it have improved a lot and saved many people’s lives. On April 29th, 2017, many people went on a strike to stop slavery which still exists today.
“Hundreds of Mauritanians marched against slavery to denounce the injustice against them. Despite slavery being abolished in the West African nation in 1981, it is still a fabric of social life. People took to the streets in the capital Nouakchott to mark the fourth anniversary of the creation of a group calling for the rights of slaves and former slaves called Haratine Charter. Light-skinned Berber and Arab Moors traditionally enslaved local black populations after settling in Mauritania centuries ago. Last year, 13 anti-slavery activists were given sentences ranging from three and 15 years in prison. Ten of them were later released, with others having their sentences reduced”

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