Cry, the Beloved Country

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    to stay angry and never address the situation that occurred. However, neglecting to truly forgive can essentially hold you back emotionally as well as physically depending on the level of damage that happened to you. Throughout the novel, “Cry, the Beloved Country”, by Alan Paton forgiveness seems to be one of the main themes. In the novel, the characters suffer countless heartbreaking situations. These situations would cause the holiest person to completely turn their back on their faith and family

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    Cry, the Beloved Country is a novel with remarkable lyricism written by Alan Paton. Born as a white South African, Alan Paton grew up during a time period marked by racial inequality and later became an activist against apartheid. He was a devout Christian so many of his writings reflect Christian faith. As an activist, he wrote many books about South Africa and racial injustice. While traveling around Europe, he began writing Cry, the Beloved Country, which was published in 1948. That same year

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    various routes, but an escape that interestingly calls back to the nature of innocence and child-like questions. It is in this way that Alan Paton’s enduring novel, Cry, The Beloved Country, takes on a unique and refreshing approach to a basic question: that of the equality and dignity of all people. Throughout Cry, The Beloved Country, Paton exudes frequent references to childhood, a devout religiosity, and of course, a return to simple questions; all of which contribute the idea of innocence and

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    stood out to me in terms of depth for a high school level class. All of these can be translated and even mirrored in our country today. The topics that I have chosen to address are forgiveness, censorship, and the significance of stories and storytelling. I would like to open with forgiveness. This topic was explored in a very adult and respectful manner in Cry, the Beloved Country. Especially with terrorist attacks such as Nine Eleven world peace isn't such as nearly a wonderful idea to preach now

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    In Alan Paton’s novel “Cry, the Beloved Country”, the theme of corruption is present in multiple facets. At the beginning of the novel we learn that Kumalo’s village has been negatively affected by members leaving in order to experience life in the big city of Johannesburg. While in the city, Kumalo’s son is corrupted by the economic system which is stacked against the black community and ends up committing murder. Finally, after Kumalo returns to his village after his long journey, he encounters

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    The novel Cry the Beloved Country was a prophecy for the future of South Africa. It alludes to and sometimes even blatantly states the conditions necessary for the end of apartheid and the beginning of peace. South Africa in the 1940's was in trouble. Kumalo, a priest, was able to see through the prejudices of the world and assess the situation. When inconvenient to involve Kumalo in the investigation, the depth of South Africa's disparity was illustrated directly through the stories of horrifying

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    more prominent scale, the economic discrimination of the “native” South African people during the apartheid era. The social and economic hierarchy of South Africa, one which placed blacks at the bottom, traces back to the colonization period of the country. As a time of warfare which exacerbated a widely held sense of divine entitlement, the colonization era provided the Dutch and English settlers with the power to claim South Africa for the country’s location and resources in order to assert their

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    Cry, the Beloved Country Dialectical Journals Theme: Racial Inequality & Injustice Quote Response “Kumalo climbed into the carriage for non-Europeans, already full of the humbler people of his race…” (43) How there’s a carriage exclusively for non-Europeans is understandable at the time period that this novel is set in, but people who read this in the 21st century might think that this is odd how Europeans couldn’t stand to ride in the same carriage as non-Europeans. “Black and white it says, black

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    Rural vs. City Lifestyle It is apparent that both the rural lifestyle and the city lifestyle both hold hardships. However, in Cry, the Beloved Country, the rural lifestyle is much more forgiving and supportive than in the city, for in the country there is family and support from the entire community. Even though the people to the country are suffering due to the drought, they are able to come together in a time a need and help each other. When Jarvis brings milk and other good to the countryside

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    In the Novel “Cry the Beloved Country” by Alan Paton, two fathers are trying to put the pieces of there families back together while also keeping themselves together. They each go through a variety of struggles, with one learning his sister is a prostitute and his son is a murder while the other deals with his sons death and tries to move passed it. Throughout the novel, racial tension is a theme frequently seen from the beginning of the book til the very end. Paton uses the setting of South Africa

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