Racism and Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton

783 Words2 Pages

Cry, the Beloved Country is a novel about Stephen Kumalo, who is in search of his son Absalom Kumalo. Stephen embarks on a long journey to find Absalom, who is in Johannesburg. On this trip, Stephen sees the decay of society and the prejudice and hatred that fills it. Stephen is sent long distances, only to find that he is redirected to another far away place. When he finally finds his son, he finds that he is in prison for murdering a white man, and that he has gotten a girl pregnant. When Stephen talks to her, she agrees to marry him and come back to Ndotsheni. Unfortunately, Absalom is tried and is to be executed. On the night before his execution, Stephen goes into the mountains to wait for his son to be executed, and cries.

I did not like Cry, the Beloved Country because of the language it was written in, and how it was written. The old language of the 1950s in Africa really bothers me because they have really different ways of saying simple things. For example, they call traffic lights “robots”, grades are called “standards”, and his family is called his “tribe.” It was sometimes difficult to tell if some of the writing was speaking or narration. This was because instead of quotation marks, there were dashes at the beginning of the spoken phrase; also, the spoken word and the narration was pushed into one short paragraph that caused you to question whether it was all spoken word or just some of it was spoken word.. This book was difficult for me to get enveloped in, and this may be because I do not like historical novels.

Other than these examples, the story was very enjoyable, although it was hard to follow. At the times when I did follow it, it was sometimes sad to see the conditions that these people were living in. O...

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... they will just keep doing what they want. It’s just like writing; if you make mistakes on what you turn in, and the teacher does not mark them, you will keep making those same mistakes. This causes a problem on many scales. If there is a lack of communication in any situation, it may lead to a fight. This could be anything from a small boyfriend girlfriend dispute, to an all out nuclear ‘World War III’. These examples show just how important simple communication can be in any situation.

A vision that comes to me about life is the vision of Martin Luther King Junior. His leadership and the reform of our society so that black people would not be shunned, but accepted as equals. His speech turned our society’s idea on race upside down. Giving every race equal rights in the United States of America have slowed, but not fully gotten rid of prejudice against race.

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