Thursday, December 26, 2019
The parallels between The Crucible and the Rwanda Genocide...
The Parallels between The Crucible and The Rwanda Genocide The themes of justice, community and sacrifice in The Crucible are universal and can be identified in many modern events in history, including the Rwanda Genocide. The genocide in Rwanda and The Salem Witch Hunts in The Crucible have many striking similarities, primarily these are: the hunting down and killing of a group of people identified as being different, the mass killing of people for no valid reason and the taking of revenge on a whole group of people for the acts of one or more individuals of that group. Common to these two events is the ruthless hunting down of victims. The judges in The Crucible pressure Abigail and the girls for the names of possible witches. Theirâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦The Hutuââ¬â¢s believe the Tutsiââ¬â¢s were trying to regain power. There was a long history of rivalry and violence between these two tribes and the killing of the president was the catalyst ignited the voracious flames of revenge. The Hutuââ¬â¢s began their manhunt to find and kill the Tutsiââ¬â¢s in revenge for the years of perceived oppression when the Tutsiââ¬â¢s ruled Rwanda. Like John Proctor in The Crucible, there too is a protagonist in the Rwanda Genocide ââ¬â Paul Rusesabagina. They both display strength in standing up for what is right, they refuse to betray their friends and they both show great courage to do what is right, even if it means sacrificing themselves. In The Crucible, as things start to get out of hand, John takes it on himself to stand up to the authority and set things right. Even when standing up against the church places suspicion on him, John will not compromise his beliefs and fights for what he believes is right. This is the same fight Paul Rusesabagina undertakes. Paul refuses to fall into the violence and hatred between the Hutuââ¬â¢s and Tutsiââ¬â¢s. He questions the idea that Hutuââ¬â¢s are better than Tutsiââ¬â¢s. He himself, a Hutu, is married to a Tutsi and he will not let himself be threatened into changing his beliefs or into following what the other Hutuââ¬â¢s are doing. As a Hutu, Paul is expected to despise the Tutsiââ¬â¢s and to be a part of the violence and
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