Recommended: The effects of culture shock
He learned how to survive by himself. Soon after, Ishmael met up with a group of boys his age. Like him, they were also running away from the war. There were six boys and their names were Alhaji, Saidu, Musa, Kanei, Moriba, and Jumah. The boys and Ishmael became friends and traveled together.
To begin with, John begins to describe an experience in the country where he states that the there was an abundance of food available which could be bought for
Just like Beah, many boys around Beah’s age left their parents to survive. However, “These terrified youngsters wandered aimlessly along jungle tracks, starving and desperate, harassed and suspected as they scrounged for food….” (Boyd 302) As these horrified young boys wandered scared and helpless, they were hungry and often fought in order for food. Beah and a bunch of other boys were accused and harassed due to all the stress they were in.
The Lost Boys of Sudan is a name they gave to a group of refugees who escaped Sudan because of the civil war that was occurring. In order to reach Kakuma in Kenya, they had walked more than a thousand miles. Their trip started in Sudan then they started walking to Ethiopia. However, they had to go back and head to refugee camps in Kenya instead. They had faced several challenges when they were walking.
“In 1991, war in Ethiopia sent the young refugees fleeing again and approximately a year later they began trickling into northern Kenya. Some 10,000 boys, between the ages of eight and 18, eventually made it to the Kakuma refugee camp—a sprawling, parched settlement of mud huts where they would live for the next eight years under the care of refugee relief organizations like the IRC.” (http://www.rescue.org/blog/lost-boys-sudan) The Lost Boys of Sudan were young refugees who had to flee their towns because of war. Salva, the main character in Linda Sue Park’s
First, the text mentions that around 17,000 young Sudanese boys fled from Sudan after being separated from their families when a civil war began, and survived a total of a 1,000-mile journey. The Lost Boys traveled a long, challenging route to safety.
Ishmael hoped his family was safe and not heartbroken over Junior and him. At the time, Ishmael was traveling with six other boys. All of the boys stayed quiet all afraid to speak about their families. After this, the boys were their own little family. They would travel village to village just trying to get away from the rebels.
Actually, the boy were worried that if soldiers came, they would make them fight or would just bomb them by plane. The older boys had to carry the younger children or the sick. Even the small boys needed to do a job to ensure the group safety and life. Dangers were wild animals, poisonous berries and other deadly food, and bomber planes. Even with all of these problems, the group made it to Kenya with less than 300 deaths.
In these novels these young children are taken away but they have family with them or family support, so they can get through the tough time. By examining the novels Night and Sold we can see that family is the key to survival, which is important because, often time people who don't have family can't get through life because they don't have a steady support system.
Have you ever gone through the desert with only a small gourd of water? Well, the Lost boys of Sudan went through South Sudan to get away from the war, and some other challenges. In the book a Walk to Water Salva and Nya have problems of getting water, but Salva is based on a real person who went through the challenges of losing his family and the brutal Sudanese war. These are some of the challenges he faced and how he solved them with what he had throughout his life. Through harsh challenges Salvas new foster family was always there for him to support and encourage him through tough times.
The boy and the man run into many problems throughout the book, most involving some screwed up people. After running into these people the boy, worried, asks this question “We wouldn’t ever eat anybody, would we?” and the father in turn answers “No. Of course not.” Unlike the father and son this group of people have gone rotten, they lack normal human characteristics such as sympathy.
Foods such as donuts, meat, and bread lead to curiosity for the Lost Boys because they never had those food options for them in Africa.
He felt hard and helpless, because he can’t do anything to change the situation. II. Credibility Statement: At First, I thought hunger only exit in developing poverty country, like Africa or South Asian or the area happened natural disaster. However after I do a lot of research, the number of hunger people in America, it really surprise me. I
In Linda Sue Park’s novel A Long Walk to Water, demonstrates one of many true stories of many a Lost Boy. Salva an eleven year old had to flee from his village all alone because his village was attacked due to the Second Sudanese War that began in 1983. When Salva was at school and his village was being attacked,he was told not to go home, but into the bush,that's where his whole journey began. Salva had to show confidence, determination,and perseverance in order to survive in a difficult environment.
He is explaining to the reader the significance that the lack of food truly is. Food which is a basic need for every human being became a scarcity. This scarcity helps him devalue himself and feel he is ceasing to exist and with this starts using irregular sentence structures as seen in the quote “I was nothing but ash now” (Wiesel 54). Notice in this sentence the simplicity of all the words except the word nothing. He is adding emphasis on the word nothing because he himself believes that he has deterred into nothing.