Nusrat's Loss In Under The Persimmon Tree

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Introduction
(AGG) Have you ever stopped to think about how your life would been like if you were shaped by some of the most drastic losses ever? Well a woman named Nusrat had been affected by loss ever since she was a child in this book. (BS-1) She had been affected when her little sister Margaret had died when she was a child. (BS-2) Likewise, she had lost her Husband Faiz to war, and he was the only person who understood her after Margaret. (BS-3) Finally, she had lost her faith and trust in her old religion Christianity, and had converted to Islam. (TS) In Under the Persimmon Tree, one major message is that people are shaped by those who they lose in their lives.

(MIP-1) Some of the first important things that happened in Nusrat’s lifetime, …show more content…

(SIP-A) Accepting that Faiz died, and knowing that Faiz died were two different things that let her move on. (STEWE-1) After she knew Faiz was dead, Nusrat had a dream. “The second figure is Faiz. This time Nusrat knows what to expect. She will have to let him go.” (Staples 231) After Nusrat knew that Faiz died because she did not hear from him even after the war ended, she had a dream of letting the spirits of Faiz and Margaret go, and she had a peaceful feeling after she woke up (STEWE-2) The next two quotes both connect to the same thing. “Nusrat feels as if a cold hand squeezes her heart. If the war in the North is over, where is Faiz? If the fighters have come to take their families home, why hasn’t he come?” (Staples 177) “If something terrible has happened to Faiz, surely they would have heard, she thinks, trying to calm herself.” (Staples 178) Nusrat had realized how many of the soldiers had come home because the war ended, and Faiz had not. She suspects that Faiz had died, but she was too scared to admit to herself that he was gone, because she wanted to believe that he was alive. (SIP-B) Nusrat had also developed from Faiz’s death by accepting that she was a Christian, and went back to her parents, because she thought about what may have happened if she stayed a Christian. (STEWE-1) Nusrat had accepted her change from a Christian to a Muslim, but she wanted to go see her parents because she had to leave anyway because Faiz had died. She did not know if they would accept her, but she knew she would accept herself. “‘If I’d been open to it, Christianity might have taught me the same things.’” (Staples 237) Nusrat knew that Faiz died, and then accepted that he was dead. Since she was a female without a male companion, she could no longer stay in Pakistan, so she decided that she had to accept herself, and to back to her parents. Fatina, Faiz’s mother, could not accept that

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