At the very end of the book “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks “ written by Rebecca Skloot turned the Henrietta’s story about how religious beliefs and spiritual changes the Lacks family views and get over their mother’s death. The question is; how did the Lacks family’s understanding about religion and spirituality to not be worried about Henrietta’s deaths and become optimistic? The first thing is the struggle to get over and release the burden about Henrietta’s death.The persuasion of Gary’s preaching and religion belief affect to Deborah, and the honor revolution for her mom. Lastly, the spirituality is about the message of God by sending Henrietta orders to fulfill the very important mission that God can’t do is saving our people’s lives, so he recalled Henrietta as an angel to make his wish came true. …show more content…
Deborah is one of Henrietta’s daughters was agitated and upset about what happened to her mother and sister. So, she decided to contact with Rebecca Skloot to get some help. At first, Deborah was planned to honor her mother by put Henrietta’s information into the internet and hope to get some donations from it and build a monument to her mother, but Mrs. Gladys didn’t agree with that. . Deborah is not happy when she mentioned that “they shots my mother’s cell into space and blew her up with nuclear bombs”? It means the scientists were cloning her mother’s cell and multiply it over and over; she was panicked and disappointed about her the peoples who did that to her mother cells because she felt like her mother was outraged. The Lacks family is upset and they want to sue every scientist who’d ever worked on HeLa’s cell because they said that those scientists are profiting cells from her mother without
Henrietta Lacks is not a common household name, yet in the scientific and medical world it has become one of the most important and talked names of the century. Up until the time that this book was written, very few people knew of Henrietta Lacks and how her cells contributed to modern science, but Rebecca Skloot aimed to change this. Eventually Skloot was able to reach Henrietta’s remaining family and through them she was able to tell the story of not only the importance of the HeLa cells but also Henrietta’s life.
This colorful and vibrant woman impacts the world through the contribution of her cells to science as well as by the kindness beheld within her heart for her family, a kindness that permits the emergence of a story untold before, of the woman responsible for the way of the world. Henrietta, although a woman of many treasures, withholds vital information of her daughter Elsie, so as to protect her and the rest of her family. This, the news of her cancer, and other such secrets define Henrietta, yet have no waiver on the view of her family of her. Famous to her family, and cherished by all who know her, Henrietta made an impact greater than her cells, though secrets kept from the sharing of this impact with the family. “...she raised the vial and touched it to her lips. “You’re famous,” she whispered, “Just nobody knows it” (263). As Deborah holds onto the cells, she holds onto the long dreamt memory of her mother, and onto the secret of her identity, the identity that the family knows; this identity connects to the unique human side of her mother, the one for which includes secrets, treasures, anguish, and
Out of the numerous recurring themes throughout the book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, two themes stood out to me. Those themes showed that there are several characters that are searching for answers or struggling to come to terms with their emotions. Two characters have a particularly difficult time with one of these two themes. The first being Deborah Lacks, the daughter of Henrietta Lacks, she is searching for answers pertaining to her mentally challenged and deceased aunt, Elsie. Deborah starts her quest at the mental hospital where Elsie was living at “Nineteen fifty-five was the year they killed her..I want them records..I know it wasn’t good..why else would they get rid of them?” (Skloot 269). Deborah is obviously upset by
Rebecca Skloot, the author of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, vividly described a series of disturbing events that took place. Henrietta was a woman who helped changed the face of medicine. Her cancerous cells never died. Scientists and doctors experimented with them and created new treatments to various diseases. The disturbing events that occur after the death of Henrietta are crucial if her story is to be told correctly. Some of these events include sexual assault to one of Henrietta’s daughters, the beating of Joe, Henrietta’s son, as a child, and torture to people with illnesses like Elise, another one of Henrietta’s daughters.
so it’s their legacy it still lives on with them through their everyday lives today. They were affected by their mother’s death also because with so much attention being on their mothers that must have drastically changed her children’s lives greatly because they have an immortal mother.” Deborah Lacks was still in diapers, her 30-year-old mother, Henrietta Lacks, lay in a segregated ward of Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. The resident gynecologist sewed radium to her cervix in an attempt to knock out the cancer that was killing her” (Skloot 2). Bobbette Lacks, Henrietta Lacks 's daughter-in-law, says that if researchers had told them about HeLa cells, then informed them of future research, her family would have cooperated. But not now. ' 'I would never subject my kids to that, ' ' Bobbette Lacks said. Deborah(heLas daughter) was desperate to know about her mother 's cells. “We’ve got your wife. She’s alive in a laboratory. We’ve been doing research on her for the last 25 years. And now we have to test your kids to see if they have cancer.” (Skloot
Her family had realized that Henrietta had suffered and died, but her cells lived on and that her cells have helped so many people. Henrietta’s son said “I just hope Hopkins and some of the other folks who benefited off of her cells will do something in honor of her and make right with the family”(Skloot, pg. 328). Henrietta is finally getting recognized, which brought unwanted attention to the family from the media, doctors, and researchers that wanted a piece of the HeLa gene line. That affected her daughter, Deborah negatively because she never really knew her mother, but when Deborah first heard of the book she was very excited that the world would finally get to know her mother’s story.
George get was one of the important characters. He was the Johns Hopkins scientist who first cultivated and distributed HeLa cells. Although there was a lot of demand for the cells, he didn’t make people pay for them, so he didn’t have profit. All he wanted was the scientific community to benefit from being aback to have these cells to experiment on later, but ironically he dies of cancer later on. Deborah Lacks was one of Henrietta’s Daughters. Henrietta died when she was very young, so she has no memories of who her mother was. Her older sister, Elise Lacks, died at the age of 15. The two events brought Deborah to the curiosity of them. The author of this book and narrator of the story is Rebecca Skloot. She was very curious about HeLa after she heard about them in class and realized her professor didn’t know much about them. Henrietta had a husband, his name is David Lacks. When Henrietta died, HeLa research was the top thing! Researchers were looking for her family to get blood cells to test for cancer. David gave them cells, but at the time he did not know that the researchers were using them to help reduce the contamination of HeLa cells into several cultures, and develop reasons to why her cells are
The things that make one human are convoluted. That’s why in a world where everyone strives for simplicity, people are often eluded by the nature of humanity. They often overlook certain aspects of a person in favor of simplicity, reducing them to a single idea which fails to encompass all the facets of an individual, which is what happens to the Henrietta Lacks’ family in Rebecca Skloots recounting of their story called The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. However, this has its ramifications. Even though many feel it is simpler to dismiss the messier details of humanity in favor of cold hard facts, Skloot shows that major consequences arrive when these personal elements are overlooked.
Henrietta’s younger daughter, Deborah learned many things about her mother when she was confronted by Rebecca Skloot who was doing research on Henrietta’s life and treatment when she was sick. She read a book about HeLa cells and it mentioned her mother and her death. Deborah also managed to get ahold of Henrietta’s medical records and through those, she found her older sister, Elsie’s, location, but came to find out that she had passed away. Deborah learned that her mother’s cells were being cloned. One of the relieving facts that Deborah was told was that the cancer was not heritable and it was unlikely
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, by Rebecca Skloot, is about a poor African American Women named Henrietta Lacks, better known as “HeLa” to the rest of the world, whose Cells taken, unbeknownst to her, revolutionized the medical field. Henrietta, originally named Loretta Pleasant, was born on August 1, 1920 in Roanoke, Virginia. After her mother’s death when she was 4 years old, her father felt incapable of taking care of her, so she was given to her grandfather and raised an old plantation house with her fist cousin, whom she ended up marrying and having four children with. Her story really starts in 1951, after she went to Johns Hopkins Hospital because of what she described a “knot” inside her. Turns out she had adenocarcinoma of the cervix (cancer of the cervix) which caused the formation of many tumors. During the treatment of her Cervical Cancer, without her consent, two tissue samples of her cervix were removed. After examination of these samples, Dr. George Otto Gey observed something “never seen
Henrietta Lacks is the victim of multiple perspectives of judgment in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. There are some viewpoints that respect her personality and honor it. However, others consider her only as a distraction and are only interested in her cells. Rebecca Skloot begins her book with a quote by Eli Weisel to emphasize her point of view in the situation, but she also gives insight on the other perspectives involved. In The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, the immoral beliefs of the outside world, the consequences they bring, and Rebecca Skloot’s contrasting point of view define the quote from Eli Weisel.
For decades, a person’s socioeconomic status or SES has affected the healthcare that people receive due to race and “wealth”. This problem has plagued American society because of these factors leading to many receiving inadequate healthcare. All of these factors for someone’s SES has changed a lot in the healthcare domain that is unfair to many who are not the “ideal”. Due to this the perception, experiences with healthcare waver and are different between the stages of these SES’s. No matter the status of a person they should receive the same amount of care, treatment, and closer.
When I first heard about the book "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks", I thought it was just a reading assignment when I was in high school that I had to complete for a grade. As I began reading I became particularly interested in Henrietta Lacks and the HeLa cells. In "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks", Rebecca Skloot talks about Henrietta Lacks and how her cells were taken without her permission, and how her family suffered afterwards. Skloot shows how medicine and science were seen back in the 1950's compared to now.
The effect the discovery and creation of the HeLa cells made on the science community and Henrietta’s family had a domino effect. Both had different opinions and beliefs on the matter; this led to some difficult questions asked of the family and of the medical community. Due to the new and advanced methods of experimentation, the HeLa cells made to to the field of science, the scientific community and the media failed to remember that Henrietta and her family were not abstractions but actual people. Rebecca Skloot, however, took into account the Lack’s family, she inquired both the history of the HeLa cells as well as the Lacks family, treating them as actual people with inalienable rights.
The theme I have selected for my book is “...Despite one’s best effort, humanity will not always return the favor. Life is not a balanced scale; life is a dance of give and take that can leave one person on top of the world and another buried six feet under.” This theme can be linked to my poster’s slogan: “It is possible to be chained by the stories we have yet to tell,” because the chains that bound the Lacks family were the cause of the unjustness they were subjected to. The image I selected represents my slogan and the characters in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks because they felt locked up, left to rot as they wondered what had happened to their mother. The chains are the lies, the secrets, and the manipulations that the Lacks family