Beyond Secret Tears By Lilli Silberman Essay

923 Words2 Pages

Survivor. This can be defined as “a person who survives, especially a person remaining alive after an event in which others have died”, or as “a person who copes well with difficulties in their life.” Being a survivor is having the ability to experience a difficult or traumatic situation and still being able to progress and contribute to the environment. Each person has a different mental and physical capacity of how much they can suffer through. A survivor can be both selfless and selfish. There is typically a happy medium between all survivors in which they balance worrying about themselves and worrying about others. A person who coped with difficulties was Mrs. Schindler, she dealt with the process of cancer and the aftermath. In the article “ Beyond Secret Tears “ by Lili Silberman, Lili would deal with the mental difficulties of a child and be separated from her mother and father. In the book Hiroshima by John Hersey, it talks about how the survivors of a nuclear bomb had to work together to stay alive and be physically well after being …show more content…

This is because she was Jewish and her parents didn't want to risk her life by keeping her. She didn't really understand since she was barely 4 years old. When she moved to the Christian institute, she “hungered to be with my mother and father. I clung to their memory….I longed to be noticed, to be touched and caressed.” Silberman had to suffer without the attention of a mother and a father which messed with her head. She was alone and vulnerable. She tried so hard to not cry because she was afraid of being picked on by the older kids. The fact that she couldn't let her emotions be free, made her mentally weaker. Since she has written this article, it means she has gotten stronger over the past few years. She survived the constant heartbreak and loneliness and because of this, she is stronger. She survived her lonesome

Open Document