Examples Of Compassion In To Kill A Mockingbird

1223 Words3 Pages

To Kill a Mockingbird is very interesting for the teenage mind because it holds a new idea to this generation. Both racism and compassion were themes of this book. We have not grown up in a country full of racism, so it does not directly affect American teens. However, we have not grown up in a world of compassion either. American tennagers have grown up in a world that you are not expected to conform. This can be an amazing thing, on the other hand, that opens you up to a much more aggressive and negative society than those who just conform. Teens have been taught that they are not to ignore most problems or keep these problems to themselves. If a friend is a subject of what appears to be a mental disorder you are expected to tell on them. However, if a person themselves is demonstrating these behaviors we are taught that it is not okay and we are punished for these behaviors. Therefore these ideas contradict themselves. The only solution is love, empathy, patience, understanding, sympathy, and compassion.
Scout explains to Atticus that Boo does not scare her then follows this by saying “Atticus, he was real nice… ” (Lee, 376). When Scout said this she was referring to Boo Radley who is passed as a crazy, mad, hateful person by the other characters. Atticus replies “Most people are, Scout, when you finally see them” (376). Atticus is much more compassionate than the average adult. Atticus is raising his children to know that they are loved. This becomes noticeable when Scout says “Jem and I found our father satisfactory: he played with us, read to us, and treated us with courteous detachment.” (6) This means that Atticus was an active character in their lives, however, he was not over protective or harmful in the way he raised them. It is thought that he is a very empathetic father. A father that is empathetic keeps an open, honest, and positive relationship with his

Open Document