Ishmael Beah's Loneliness

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After war ravages Ishmael Beah’s home, which leaves him separated from his friends and relatives, his definition of family is changed from a source of comfort to one that plagues his mind with loneliness. After Beah is given directions to Bonthe, a nearby village, he walks for days on his own before settling in the forest to rest. He is able to find trees that are replete with berries to eat and a tree to sleep in, but in the quiet moments where he has nothing to occupy him with, his mind always wanders back to his old life in Mattru Jong, as well as the family he has left behind. The author writes, “The most difficult part of being in the forest was the loneliness. It became unbearable each day. One thing about being lonesome is that you think …show more content…

Even as a young child alone in the forest, Beah states that the loneliness was what made the forest a difficult place to inhabit. Nature also used to be something that comforted him prior to the war, but this was due to the stories his grandparents used to tell him. Even with nature all around him, Beah is unable to focus on what used to bring him happiness, trading it in for loneliness instead, which demonstrates how much not having his family has affected him. In addition, after Beah runs into a group of boys, three of which he used to go to school with, he joins them on their journey to find safety. They find a house off the coast of the Atlantic, which turns out to be a fishing hut of a kind man who hosts the boys. The boy’s host refuses to reveal his name to them, but understands that Beah and his group mean to do no harm to him, and that they are only children, something that had been forgotten by other villagers the group had encountered. After a few days, Beah and his friend’s begin to talk more to each other in the hut as their spirits were able to be lifted for the short time

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