A Refugee is a person who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster. Ha’s a 10 year old girl from saigon who is a refugee, she had to flee her home in saigon, before she fled her her she was a very stubborn and sassy. The title of the book is Inside out and back again by Thanhha Lai. Refugees lives from inside out when they have to leave their home. The article states, “ Then we got a letter from a lady in Serbs who was out contact with him, and has been killed.” (Brice, 26) This shows emris dad has been killed and her family is moving and leaving her behind. This article states, “Brother Vu wants to cut it down, saying it's better than letting communists have it.” (Lai, 60) This shows Ha’s brother is wanting to cut it down because where the communists don't have more food. This article states, “Brother Vu chops the head falls; a silver blade slices. Black seeds spill cluster of eyes wet and crying.” (Lai, 60) This shows that Ha’s brother is cutting down the papaya tree because he don't want the communist to have it. …show more content…
The article states, “ I want to get my family here on if that doesn't happen, send them money because life is really hard there. I'm going back to see my father's grave. But america is giving us a better future than we could have in Bosnia.” (Brice, 14) This shows she's having a better live where she is now. The article states, “ I go to the board, chalk the answers in five moves.” (Lai, 187) This shows Ha is getting more comfortable in school and about live there. This article states, “ We line up in five rows, squatting and shifting, the only moves he has taught us. I make sure to get in the front row.” (Lai, 192) This shows she's getting more of showing herself because she's getting more use to
Thanhha Lai wrote a novel called “Inside Out & Back Again” which is about a little girl and her family in Vietnam, the little girl is named Ha. Ha and her family are in the city of saigon, the story takes place during the Vietnam war and because of the Vietnam war her and her family’s lives are turned “inside out”. But later everything comes “back again” This story relates to the universal refugee’s life because they themselves are turned “ Inside out and back again”.
In the novel “Inside out & Back Again” written by Thanhha Lai , The main character Ha flees her home due to war. Her and her family were looking for a new home trying to start a new life. Although it wasn’t easy for her to start a new life she had to learn to overcome many challenges. In the novel Ha reveals that her life is related to the refugee life even though it was unexpected. When refugees flee their home, it affects them when they leave and find a new home, it also involves affecting them when their life is turned inside out,and it demonstrates why they relate to the refugee experience.
Refugee is about a boy named Mahmoud and his family. Refugee is written by Alan Gratz and begins in the Middle East and ends in Europe. The trouble starts when their house in Aleppo, Syria is destroyed by a missile, and they are forced to find a home elsewhere. They decide to make the treacherous journey to Germany. On their way they have to make life and death decisions and have to cross the Mediterranean Sea. Most of the countries welcome Mahmoud and his family, but on their way through Hungary, they were beaten and harmed by tear gas. This book has many turns in it. For example, while trying
Our cohort is nearing the end of its secondary education and therefore it is important that we reflect on the ways in which it has shaped our attitudes, values and beliefs. For example, over the past five years, we have read, analysed and evaluated various literary works such as novels, plays, poems and films in our English studies. These texts have expressed various ideologies, explored interesting themes and introduced us to fascinating characters. These elements have left a lasting impression on our attitudes, values and beliefs. In addition to this, English literary texts have provided us with historical knowledge as well as a thorough understanding of the role that aesthetic devices
“This year he predicts our lives will twist inside out” (pg.4). This quote from the book Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai confirms that Ha and her family…….. Many refugees like Ha overcame obstacles and found strength and resilience despite these difficulties. Additionally, in the book Inside Out and Back Again Ha and her family share their story of why they were forced to flee their home country in Vietnam and begin their journey to an unknown world in America. Ha and her family underwent the universal refugee experience of turning “inside out” and coming “back again”.
In the novel “Inside Out and Back Again” written by Thanhha Lai, it’s explained how a young girl by the name of Ha and her family struggles when fleeing their homes due to the war. It describes all the new things she has to learn and the struggles she faces during this time. When they were forced to leave their country they had to adapt to many things such as new culture, a new language and different new kinds of food. When they find a new home they have to adapt to their different life styles. This makes the refugees feel like their life is turning upside down. Has life is related to the refugee experience because she had to go through many down through living as a refugee.
Do you know what Refugees are what they do how they live and how they survive. Refugees are people that have to leave there home all because of war, they have to leave and find new ones far away. Before war happened in Vietnam Ha was different she was sneaky because when she went to get groceries she would by fried dough for herself, and she was mean because when she would hide her brothers sandals when she got mad at them. The title of the book makes you wonder a little by the words inside out and back again, the author Thanhha Lai had a good idea for making this book for a history lesson. Refugees like Ha and her family turn back again when they find better home like Ha she stared understanding more.
This sample utilizes emotive language in the words ‘scarred and distorted’ as Anh is unsure of his feelings towards his father and is lacking self-confidence. The simile of ‘bubbling poison’ describing the pain and discomfort of crossing ‘that line’ demonstrates how torn Anh was between protecting his sense of self or protecting his family. This fractured self-belief leads to a dilemma of patriotism versus antagonism with the relationship between him and his father. The ruptured devotion of family traditions encountered by individuals creates different aspects of camaraderie and subsequently, The Happiest Refugee portrays various perspectives on the essence of belonging.
The book begins by discussing the historical context of the war and time period in which refugees emerge into the scene. According to Tang, “the United States publicly positioned itself as the champion of displaced Cambodians, passing the 1980 Refugee Act and casting it as a global freedom project and Cambodian refugees as needing rescue by U.S. liberalism” (15). Throughout the book, Tang discusses how the United States contributes to the constant state of captivity that refugees experience from the minute they leave home to the moment they arrive in America. The United States’ participation in the Vietnam War gave rise to Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge; these conditions caused a lot of unrest and forced many people like Ra to flee or remain trapped in captivity under the Khmer Rouge. The United States’ perspective on their actions during the war do not acknowledge their contributions to the national refugee crisis. Refugees are viewed as a solution to the war in the American perspective; thus, Eric Tang introduces the concept of refugee exceptionalism: “the ideologies and discursive practices that figure refugees as necessarily in the hyperghetto but never of it” (14). Tang effectively outlines the subsequent chapters where they each address a certain way in which captivity is maintained for Ra and other refugees. In Chapter 3 that mentions the Welfare Resistance, Ra is shown to be
Ha from Inside Out and Back Again and other refugees from the article “Children of War” all experience the same upsetting feeling of being inside out because they have lost everything familiar to them. One way that they feel inside out because of the loss of their possessions is in the poem “Last Respects” it states, “Brother Khoi nods and I smile, but I regret not having my doll as soon as the white bundle sinks into the sea.” (Lai 86). Ha goes through a struggle when she gives up her doll, the one possession that she was allowed to take with her as they were leaving, to help her brother and give him comfort for the loss his chick. Another way that represents the universal refugee experience of feeling inside out because of loosing everything is that in “Children of War” it explains, “Everything completely changed. One minute we had everything, then we had nothing.” (Brice). Plainly it is stated that the people in the Bosnia at that
Ha’s life as a refugee is a life experience is something that only the strong can go through, and her entire family made it. When refugees flee home, it is because of fear that their family will be torn apart by the war when they leave home, family, friends, memories, basically the perspective of the person is leaving what they desired. Then when they finally do find a home, (not all), they are greeted with new challenges, one of many is that acceptance in their new home, some people probably don’t want to make a living in their new home, “But life happens wherever you are, whether you make it or not”. But when people turn “inside out” they feel empty inside and everything is useless, they have to start over from square one and become “back again”. When they become happy again and accept what has happened to them, so they can move forward in life. This book is mostly about a girl with her family who was in a war, so they left of fear of being torn apart by the war because they will be safer than where they are at in the moment, Saigon Vietnam, but are greeted with challenges in the Alamba U.S.A.
Refugee: A person who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster and seek safety.
Let’s start by defining what it is to be a refugee. A refugee is any citizen of a nation who is forced to flee due to persecution or unsafe living conditions.
I was very frightened when those red eyes stared at me from a distance. I froze as the water sent ripples through the water from all the rocks. I felt a like I should scream but I knew that my grandparents would be mad to see me out here in the dark by myself. I was thinking of running back to my grandparents house but I didn’t want to take the risk of the red eyed animals to chase me and then catch me and eat me. I wondered what animal it was but I was really thinking it was a coyote because I had heard the call of one just a minute ago. I knew I had to get it out of here or I had to get out of here. I needed my flashlight to find my way back. I decided to make a run for it. I ran as fast as I could but I could hear something behind me cracking all the twigs that were in it’s path. CRACK! CRACK! CRACK!. I was getting tired by the
One day these three friends had a plan to go to this place a but they wanted to go at a specific time and that was 12:00 am dun dun duuuuuun so then they would have to leave at 10:00 so when came close to 10:00pm they grabbed a bag of food and ran out the door to the car the driver named Ethan was the only one who knew where they were going so Ethan told Cantyn and Brenden that we are going to an abandon insane asylum and they were kind of glad to go. they were getting closer when their car broke down so they got their phones out and they had no bars so they couldn’t call a tow truck but then they got out of the car to see where they were and Ethan said we are only two blocks away from the abandon asylum and then something grabbed Brenden from the shirt and chocked him and Ethan remember that the hand haunted these woods.