The Boy In The Striped Momma Analysis

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“Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few”, these powerful words crafted by Winston Churchill reveals that in the hands of so few many were hurt. During the war, how could have these people face conflict? How could they face death and still strive? For example, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne show one of the boy’s risk simply to stay alive, and in Hiroshima by John Hersey Mrs. Nakamura pulls her children out desperately, what for? To survive. In Maus, II Anja lives through dehumanizing conflicts and is faced with death every day even though she suffers from a mental illness she still survives. The hunger to survive is greater than anything that keeps people alive when dealing with dreadful conflicts.
Living through situations that cause so much pain and death the only thing wanting to keep someone alive is the need to be alive. Shmuel a young Jewish boy innocent of his miserable life lives through hell in the agonizing concentration camp and is sent to Bruno's household to clean glasses since his fingers are …show more content…

In the novel Hiroshima by John Hersey about the Hiroshima bombing, one of the survivors, Mrs. Nakamura a mother of three children dug her children desperately out of the rubble of her own home. “With a bit more digging, Mrs. Nakamura cleared a hole above the child and began to pull her arm. ‘Itai! It hurts!’ Yaeko cried. Mrs. Nakamura shouted ‘There’s no time now to say whether it hurts or not,’ and yanked her whimpering daughter up.” After the bomb exploded and completely destroying everything in its path, and on its way destroyed countless homes and buried anyone in them. Mrs. Nakamura managed to dig out her children and survive. In this case, she did everything possible to allow her child to keep living, her child did have to go through a temporary pain of being wedged under her home but it does not compare to the excruciating pain of being

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