
C.J.’ s Question
The teacher asks Marji what do you want to be when you grow up? A prophet she answers. See Marjane believes that her world has problems that she would like to fix. According to her mind state she was the last prophet. With her as prophet the world would be a better place for everyone to live in. For instance she believes she we be able to make laws to which old people will not hurt or maids can eat with the families they serve. Her thoughts were very big for a small person. This is totally a preconception because my character Marji will soon figure out that the world she lives in will not under any circumstance allow her to even wear her hair down let alone her be someone in charge. She soon found out that her life was under the new regime worthless and she should be covered from head to toe in a kitchen serving her husband. It started with the veils she had to wear in school and also her choice of music and pop culture of the united states was forbidden. Her world at a very early age was forced conceived on her.
Spoiled brats love getting what they want and fronting their products in front of have-nots. Myself has fallen victim to that with a hard lessoned learned. After having two sports cars and countless up to date gym shoes I believed that my mother will always be drowned in money and I had nothing to worry about. CNN breathes through the t.v. a sigh of hopelessness as they say we are in a recession. Two weeks later my mom gave my car to the bank because my father had lost his job. Debts had squared up with me in a ring and I couldn’t tag my mother in because She was out. So now I’m on my own. I learned never to take anything for granted.
Salt’s Question
When they found his body his head was underneath the water. That was narrated by my character Marji as a family friend had been drowned because of the cultures rising differences. The world she thought she could one day conquer was coming to conquer before she could get started. Her country was segregated. I believe God wants us to dress in veils and respect men. The other group is saying everyone is equal. That’s enough wood to start a big fire. With this her family continuously go in what they call demonstrating in the street to protest against the governments harsh demands. Some of Marji’s family go to jail, others go to jail and are executed in jail. Her family could leave like everyone else and head for the United States but the strength plus pride makes them stay.
In the 1960’s blacks and whites couldn’t seem to put the two colors together to make grey. This un colorful situation turned colorly dangerous. As my grandmother sports a n all white skin complexion her brothers and sisters had to settle for a darker epidermis due to different fathers. This in turn led my grandmother able to sit in the front of the bus while my Great uncles take a ride in the back. During the Civil rights movement to change this my family always marched. Like how when Marji demonstration situations turned to officials using brute force to move the passionate people. Lives were lost and put away in jail. Our heritage both coincide because the two both really felt the higher powers of government treated them unfairly. To get anything in lefe however you have to fight for it.
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