Analysis Of Nelson Mandela's The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas

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When thinking of freedom, it’s the idea that people are able to act, speak, and have their own thoughts without any restraints. With oppression it’s the prolong of cruel treatment or control. I think the need for freedom and the overcoming of oppression is something that has been an issue since the time of slavery, maybe even before then it 's just that we’re not considered as property in this day in age and we’re entitled to the same rights as everyone else. When I think about it, are we really free and what are the reasons for someone suffering at some point in their life? Nelson Mandela’s reflection, “Working Toward Peace” and Ursula Le Guin, in her fictional essay “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas,” both discuss these themes throughout …show more content…

When will there come a time where our freedom is not up for questioning? Are we living in a world where everyone is considered as free or is it just a figment of our imagination? All of these questions ponder through my mind and causes me to think about why is it that people of African or African American descent considered as a threat in the eyes of people that are considered as more superior than Africans/African Americans? Did it ever occur to people that people of a “superior” race is to blame for people in society thinking that blacks are seen as a threat? A book that I 've been reading, Burning Down The House:The End of Juvenile Prison by Nell Bernstein, basically explains why blacks are perceived as a threat. When youth is put into a juvenile prison, they have these routine strip-searches, eating times, bathing times, and etc for the time they are there until they complete their sentence. What people fail to realize is that inside those prisons the inmates are being victimized and abused by guards, staff as well as other inmates from excessive touching in inappropriate areas to purposely doing things to make them want to retaliate so that they are able to aggressively touch them causing them to be mentally and physically strong so they are able to handle …show more content…

For example, the issue last year with the UVA student, Martese Johnson, who was voicing his opinion on the issues with African Americans and law enforcement at the time. In Johnson voicing his opinion there weren’t any words that would promote an act of violence, yet ended up in handcuffs with a bloody face because of the police. From my understanding, isn’t everyone of all races entitled to the First Amendment as long as it 's not promoting any volatile actions or threatening to anyone? Reasons like this causes African Americans to think that whether or not we actually have equal rights or is just written on a piece of paper and not applying to them. In the eyes of people of an African American descent, there’s this understanding that there’s no such thing as being truly free if from the beginning African Americans were never

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