A Long Walk To Water is a beautifully written text by Linda Sue Park about two Sudanese kids who have difficult paths to walk in life. In the novel A Long Walk To Water Linda Sue Park juxtaposes the two characters of Nya and Salva, the story of Salva is true however the story of Nya is a realistic fiction piece used to show the difference of the two time periods in the country, and to illustrate how Salva started “The water for Sudan project.”. The book starts out when Nya and Salva are the mere age of 11. Both children are from what is now the country of Southern Sudan, in Northern Africa. However their situations were different. Salva starts the book living a normal cattle farmers son's life, when one day he is at school and the Northern …show more content…
Along the way he depends on people such as his friends and his Uncle to help him survive challenging environments. After witnessing the deaths of his closest friend and his Uncle Jewiir he becomes more determined and he becomes a leader, as he grows internally and physically. Years later Salva single handingly leads a group of 12,000 + boys to safety in Kenya. Salva lived through what we call the second Sudanese civil war. The Second Sudanese Civil War was a conflict from 1983 to 2005 between the central Sudanese government and the Sudan People's Liberation Army. It was largely a continuation of the First Sudanese Civil War. It lasted for 22 years and is one of the longest civil wars on record. The war resulted in the independence of South Sudan. Roughly two million people died as a result of war. Four million people in southern Sudan were displaced during the war. Nya on the other hand was living through a different situation that occurred after the war. Nya was living through an economic water scarcity problem that took place in 2008. Economic water scarcity is caused by a lack of investment in water infrastructure or an insufficient human capacity to satisfy the demand of water in areas where the population cannot afford to use an adequate source of water so the water tends to be very harmful as the countries
Floridians lives on top of a limestone foundation that was once upon a time was a shallow coral sea and is now riddled with caves. In the film Water’s Journey: Hidden Rivers of Florida there were divers tracking the path of water through underground caves, specifically Florida’s aquifers. They were navigating through the complicated system of undergrounds rivers from where water disappears underground to where it resurfaces in the springs of Florida.
“All of the adversity I’ve had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles, have strengthened me.” Walt Disney. The books A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park, a fictional book, and Iqbal a fictional book, share the same theory. A Long Walk to Water is a book about the true story of Salva; a little boy that gets separated from his family because of the war in South Sudan and later becomes the leader of a group called the Lost Boys of South Sudan. This novel also includes a fictional story of Nya, a little girl that can’t go to school, because she has to walk to the water well twice a day, taking up most of the day. Salva helps Nya get a water well in her village years later by using his organization, Water for South Sudan. Iqbal is the true story of Iqbal Masih, a little boy that became a child slave, but was able to set himself and his friends free from slavery. This book is told in the point of view of Fatima a fictional little girl that was one of the children who was enslaved in the same factory as Iqbal. In each book, the characters grow stronger because of a cultural conflict. Cultural conflicts can force people to become stronger.
The environment made getting food and water very difficult. There is a lack of recourses in Sudan. Finding food was a regular struggle for Salva during his journey. He got so hungry that “he couldn't even talk, he was too weak and hungry”(24). Another dangerous part about the environment, or mother nature, was the lion country. Salva and his group had to travel through a hot area full of lions. The lions could have taken Salva, just like they took Marial. The lions were a large threat, “A lion had been hungry enough to approach the group as they slept”(40). They had made it out of lion country, but the next thing that they had to make it through was the Akobo desert. This desert was very hot, and had little to no water. This made it very difficult for continue on. There were also hurtful pants in the desert, like thorns, “Thorns gored his feet”(52). Mother nature made the journey very difficult for
There are many people that can’t have what you do. When you sit there and think about how poor you are and how much you don’t have you should really be thinking of the people that have even less. Linda Sue Parks was one of the people that did and she wrote a book called A Long Walk to Water which is a true story. In the novel there is a young boy named Salva Dut. Salva Dut was an 11 year old boy who was separated from his family because of a school shooting. This happened in Sudan which is now South Sudan because of war. In hopes that he finds his family again he will walk and walk everyday. Salva also faces many challenging things while he’s walking such as finding food and water, avoiding gunmen, and wild animals. Salva had a lot of accomplishments on his way too like leading 1500 lost boys of Sudan to a refugee camp by the Gilo River, then he goes to America seven years later and lives with a family in New York, and he finds his father many years later and starts a group called Water
“When Salva heard stories, he thought of Marial. He felt his persistence growing, as it had in the days after Uncle’s death. I will get us safely to Kenya,” he thought. “No matter how hard it is.” Salva’s thought showed no matter what happened, he would keep on moving.
Imagine being in pain and not knowing where your family could be. Imagine walking for miles just to fetch something people can walk eight stairs to grab it. A ton of people are able to drive a car around place to place; meanwhile, others have to walk and just focus on taking one step at a time. In the book, A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park, Salva a boy from Southern Sudan, Africa in 1985 is in the middle of a Civil War and is running away and travels on foot to Ethiopia to a Refugee Camp. Nya, a young girl from Southern Sudan in 2008 has to walk eight hours twice every day just to get a miniscule amount of water for her family. Both characters exhibit countless traits while the reader learns about their journeys: miserable, dependable, scared, fearless, tough, and strong; however, after a careful analysis, two traits really stand out: miserable for Salva and dependable for Nya.
To begin with, I will be informing and reviewing the book A Long Walk to Water. The Author of this book is Linda Sue Park. This book has two main genres which are realistic fiction and nonfiction. The reason this story has two genres is because it revolves around two characters with their own story. In A Long Walk to Water the main characters are Salva, Nya, Jewiir and Marial. Jewiir plays an important role in the book because his actions affect Salva as well as protect him. He is also the uncle of Salva. Salva learns how to become a leader and not give up because of his uncle. This story mainly wraps around Salva and Nya. Salva is a young kid who becomes one of the ¨lost boys of sudan¨. That means he ended up being displaced and orphaned during
The African state of Sudan was plagued by a civil war as written about in Linda Sue Park’s “A Long Walk to Water.” This book follows a boy named Salva from present day South Sudan. The book starts in 1985 when Salva is 11 years old. Salva is a survivor. He endured the Civil war, Dangerous African Wilds, and the Gilo River.
often don’t just come by immediately to our rescue. As such, we have to get through our obstacles and reach our goals with small steps. Every grade we catch up with is a step forward in the path to our dream and every year pass is a treasure chest, difficult to open, yet holds great rewards to use further in life. Salva Dut is the founder of a “Water for Sudan,” a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping the people of Sudan; an organization which took years to accomplish. The novel, “A Long Walk to Water,” written by Linda Sue Park, portrays his life experience as a victim of The Second Sudanese Civil War. The obstacles he faced to move on towards life are prominently displayed throughout the work.
Jimmy Dean once advised, “I can’t change the direction of the wind, but I can adjust my sails to reach my destination.” The novel A Long Walk to Water authored by Linda Sue Park, is a work of realistic historical fiction and a dual narrative focused on adjusting to change. One storyline is about a young eleven year old girl named Nya who is apart of the Nuer tribe and lives in Sudan. Nya lives the life of a young Sudanese girls because they collect water for their family every day. The other storyline is about an eleven year old boy named Salva who is in the Dinka tribe and lives in Sudan, but travels throughout many countries and states in his life. Salva’s story line shows how getting attacked by rebels and escaping from civil war changed his and many others’ lives. Both characters face many changes throughout the story. Linda Sue Park wants readers to know to accept change for good or bad.
The Sudanese Civil War was a fight between the central Sudanese government and the Sudan People’s Liberation Army, which occurred from 1983 to 2005. It was mainly a continuation of the First Sudanese
A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park was a reading requirement that I was obliged to finish in order to enter a summer camp. I decided why not kill two birds with one stone. Once I received the book, I finished it that very day along with half of my summer reading packet. Though forced to read the novel, I enjoyed the painless experience. To those searching for a simple, uncommon, heart-warming tale, this short novel is what you are looking for.
The relationship you have with others often has a direct effect on the basis of your very own personal identity. In the essay "On The Rainy River," the author Tim O'Brien tells about his experiences and how his relationship with a single person had effected his life so dramatically. It is hard for anyone to rely fully on their own personal experiences when there are so many other people out there with different experiences of their own. Sometimes it take the experiences and knowledge of others to help you learn and build from them to help form your own personal identity. In the essay, O'Brien speaks about his experiences with a man by the name of Elroy Berdahl, the owner of the fishing lodge that O'Brien stays at while on how journey to find himself. The experiences O'Brien has while there helps him to open his mind and realize what his true personal identity was. It gives you a sense than our own personal identities are built on the relationships we have with others. There are many influence out there such as our family and friends. Sometimes even groups of people such as others of our nationality and religion have a space in building our personal identities.
When reflecting and writing on Eiseley’s essay and the “magical element”, I balk. I think to myself, “What magic?”, and then put pen to page. I dubiously choose a kiddie pool to draw inspiration from, and unexpectedly, inspiration flows into me. As I sit here in this little 10x30 foot backyard, the sky is filled with the flowing gaseous form of water, dark patches of moist earth speckle the yard, the plants soak up their scattered watering, and the leaves of bushes and trees imbue the space with a sense of dampness from their foliage. As my senses tune into the moisture that surrounds me, I fill Braedon’s artificial pond with water. I stare at the shimmering surface, contemplating Eiseley’s narrative, and the little bit of life’s wellspring caught in Brae’s pool. I see why Eiseley thought the most abundant compound on the earth’s surface is mystical.
Sudan is the biggest nation in Africa and around six million people live in Darfur. The massacres in Darfur began in 2003 and still continue today. The genocide is let by equipped Arab soldiers (also known as the Janjaweed). The Janjaweed soldiers dismantled communities, corrupted the point of supply of water, killed, abused, and tormented innocent people. Millions of people in Darfur were left without homes and forty-eight thousand dead. Sudan has been in two civil wars since their freedom in 1956. There was then a fight for limited supplies and wanderers began to fight for land. This led to a war between North Sudan against South Sudan. In 1972, the first domestic war comes to a finish. Eleven years later the second, and deadliest, war begins. Over four millions were left without a home and over two million were killed in a span of twenty years. The government rejected any information of disturbance in Darfur. In 2005, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement ended the North versus the South fight. South Sudan gained more legislative control in the agreement. In 2009, Sudan president Omar Bashir was wanted for felonies against mankind and later wanted for genocide. Omar Bashir has fled to different countries where he has been protected.