Analysis Of The Ones Who Walk Away From The Omelas

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Please, Protect Omelas. The Ones Who Walk Away From The Omelas by Ursula K. Le Guin made in October 1973. Long story short, this story is about this amazing city where there is no guilt, no pain, wise people and strong athletes. What could possibly go wrong? Well, there one person in the city of thousands of joyful citizens that do not feel the happiness of the others. One kid. This kid lives under one of the many beautiful houses in the city. This kid is so sickly and lame we cannot tell what they are. There the kid lives every day of his life sitting in his manure and wondering what they have done wrong to get himself into this position. what did they do? nothing. See, this town has a curse where if the town is to thrive on guilt This means there would have to have been 17 children who suffered before him. 17 living breathing children who are forced to suffer starting at an age of three seeing as number 18 seems to have faint memories of the outside world. So the question, who is to say this child will not live past ten years of age? For this, I will need to indulge into a more serious topic. The Holocaust. This was a horrible event taking place in the 1940scauseing the death of over one million people died in this event. Back on task, during this event people were put in such poor living conditions the lifespan was no more than a few months. Keep in mind these are stronger older men and women. As opposed to a young child. Unfortunately, it is safe to assume this child is not going to last any more than a few months. Physically he is twisted beyond the point of gender identification stated here “In the room a child is sitting. It could be a boy or a girl.” (Ursula 3). The town of Omelas is a happy town that many would perceive as paradise. Another word for paradise is heaven. That is what it seems to represent, heaven. Or at the very least the heaven the flesh side of humanity wants. But this opens up another question, who is the kid here? Well if the town citizens represent a guiltless humanity and the town of Omelas is supposed to be heaven as seen by the flesh. The poor child, number eighteen themselves, must represent Jesus Christ

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