Refugees are people who have been forced to leave their countries in order to escape war, persecution, and natural disaster. Most refugees are ordinary people coming from ordinary places. One of these ordinary people, Kim Hà from South Vietnam, was created as a fictional character for the novel Inside Out & Back Again, written by Thanhha Lai, who modeled it after her own life as a refugee. Lai, just like her character Hà, was forced to flee her home during the Vietnam War, and ended up in the United States, in the state of Alabama. While Hà is a fictional character, Lai gives her certain characteristics so readers of her novel will realize the struggles refugees have to face, and the ways they must recover from them.
In the novel Inside Out and Back again Ha and her family have to flee their home South Vietnam because of the Communist invasion, but escaping isn’t the only hard part, Ha gets bullied, doesn’t speak the language of her new country, and has no clue about the culture of this new place. Ha has a very similar experience to many other refugees throughout the world. Ha, her mother, and brothers have all gone through many things flipping their world upside down, and just like many other refugees there whole life has changed because of what happened to them. But despite all of this they have managed to come back. Just like Ha’s family Til Gurung and his people have had to go through the same universal refugee experience.
Could you imagine having to leave your home due to incredible violence? Or being forced to leave your homeland or else face death? These are the struggles that the three characters Isabel, Josef, and Mahmoud faced in the book Refugee. Throughout the story each child is burdened with these hardships as well as overwhelming fear.
Did you know that 33,972 people are forced a day to flee their home due to escalating situations in their home. Like these refugees , Ha and her family are one of those 33,972 refugees. Ha and her family became refugees looking for asylum like any other refugee fleeing their home country due to war. These people are people who leave their country due to escalating situation and try to find a new place to call home . In the book Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai, tells us about a 10 year old girl who has been through a dangerous war and fleeing her home in Saigon, Vietnam.
Refugees are people flee their home countries to another country for better life due to the war in their home counties. The story of The Other Side the Sky by Farah Ahmedi is about an Afghanistan girl who had a physical disability tries to flee to the United States with her only family for better life. More than 75 years ago, a group of refugees were trying to flee Europe before World War II. They were Jews. Anne Frank, the author of The Diary of a Young Girl.
Now in America Ha has to learn how to do everything over again including a whole new language so she is turned inside out. Another reason Ha is being turned inside out is because Ha is in a new place with people of other races so she gets teased. “I see nothing but squeezed eyes, twisted mouths. No, they’re not curious”(pg. 146 Lai).
The novel “Inside Out and Back Again” describes the life of a family of refugees searching to find home. It describes the highs and the lows of day-to-day life for the family, perfectly describing the universal refugee experience. The universal refugee experience is an umbrella term used to describe the myriad of trials and tribulations refugees endure as they move to a foreign place. These are experiences that all or most refugees typically go through in their process of finding a new home. Ha’s journey is a perfect example of the universal refugee experience.
Refugees face many difficult situations after migrating to a new home. Because of the migration and the mixed receptions from the community, their lives start to twist and turn in all sorts of directions. The book Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai tells a story with poems about a young girl named Ha who’s life starts to turn “inside out” as she leaves her home in Saigon during the Vietnam War. The article “Refugee and Immigrant Children: A Comparison” by Ana Marie Fantino and Alice Colak describes the struggles and process of adaptation that refugees in Canada face every day. Ha’s and other refugees’ lives turn “inside out” as they become a teacher for their loved ones and a punching bag for their classmates, but gradually turns “back again” with the help of their community.
Refugees and immigrants' lives are turned inside out and back again when they are forced to flee their homes. They have to leave due to war, persecution, or natural disasters. This happened to a Vietnamese girl named Ha. Ha was forced to leave her country because of a war between South and North Vietnam.
The lives of refugees are turned “inside out” out when they are forced to flee because they have to leave the only home they have ever known and try to figure out a way to leave their old lives behind. They are not leaving their country because they want to but because they are forced to and it can feel like
The Refugee Experience The universal refugee experience is related to Ha’s refugee experience in the book Inside Out and Back Again, because they both have to find transportation, learn a new culture, and find a new home. In the Desperation at Sea article in the Junior Scholastic Magazine Ali fled his home in Somalia. He had to travel across the Sahara Desert in the back of a pickup truck to get to Tripoli, Libya in order to get on a boat to Italy.
Did you know refugees go through many challenges? A refugee is a person who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war or a natural disaster. Ha, a refugee, is a ten year old girl that lived in South Vietnam. When war come to her home, her family moved aboard a refugee boat. Ha belongs to the novel Inside Out and Back Again.
Children make up half of the 21 million refugees universally (Figures at a Glance). A refugee is a person that has been forced from their home due to war, persecution, or natural disaster. Refugee children endure many traumas such as: loss, stress, prolonged stays in refugee camps, dangerous escapes, violence, and even cases of rape and murder. The horrors these children experience leads to a struggle to find their identity. F This can be vividly seen in the novel, Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai, by a ten-year-old girl named Ha.
The poem Refugee Blues was written by Wilfred. H .Auden in 1939 during World War Two. “Refugees Blues” is in reference to the abuse of human rights and the suffering, despair and isolation that all refugees experience during their journey of survival. The poet uses a range of techniques such as contrast, emotive language and personification to convey the hardship refugees had to endure.
A refugee is a person who has been forced to leave their home country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster. There are many different types of refugees, these include refugees who are escaping war, social discrimination, racial discrimination, religious persecution, those who are seeking aid after a natural disaster, political unrest, and those who fear for their lives and the lives of their family. These people are given refugee status and are placed in designated refugee camps across the country where they are supposed to be cared for and educated, but this is not happening. Many of the countries only provide shelter for the refugees but do not provide the rest of the basic needs. There are many factors that contribute to a person becoming a refugee these include war, famine, racial prejudice, religion, harassment or torture due to political views, nationality, and natural disaster.