Who wonder if this statement was really true, and yes, nothing remains the same. Everybody faces changes in life. Change of class in school, moving house, progressing from a primary student to a high school student, and the loss of loved ones. When you ask someone, “Is change a Good Thing?” Many people would say “no.” As humans, we tend to focus on all the negative changes that happen to us. We do not go deep into these changes and ask ourselves whether there is another side to them. Change has been conveyed as a multidimensional factor of life, with positive and negative influences, as shown by the film Once Upon a Time in Cabramatta (OUATIC) by Bernadette Lim and the poem The Door by Miroslav Holub. Change is a tornado: it comes without warning and can pass by without interference, or can cause irreversible damage. A majority people believe that tornado is a synonym for change. In OUATIC John Newman states the Vietnamese ought to be deported, “The one thing they fear is deportation back to the jungles of Vietnam, because that’s where they belong”. Newman symbolically labels the Vietnamese as uninhabited animals, signifying they cannot assimilate into civilised Australian civilization, and consequently, don’t fit into the Australian civilization. The point that Australia altered its policy and permitted refugees from Vietnam, eliminating the White Australia policy started a colossal conversion in the social and cultural elements of Australia. He uses inclusive language “they” to additionally emphasise the Vietnamese are not Australian and shouldn’t be here. This directed to a change concerning the white Australians and the Vietnamese, affecting this tornado to come without a warning. The white Australians retreated in terms of their civilization. This change headed to a destructive progress – a regression – representing that change doesn’t constantly lead to a good change. Change can lead to positive and negative risk, The Door,
Who wonder if this statement was really true, and yes, nothing remains the same. Everybody faces changes in life. Change of class in school, moving house, progressing from a primary student to a high school student, and the loss of loved ones. When you ask someone, “Is change a Good Thing?” Many people would say “no.” As humans, we tend to focus on all the negative changes that happen to us. We do not go deep into these changes and ask ourselves whether there is another side to them. Change has been conveyed as a multidimensional factor of life, with positive and negative influences, as shown by the film Once Upon a Time in Cabramatta (OUATIC) by Bernadette Lim and the poem The Door by Miroslav Holub. Change is a tornado: it comes without warning and can pass by without interference, or can cause irreversible damage. A majority people believe that tornado is a synonym for change. In OUATIC John Newman states the Vietnamese ought to be deported, “The one thing they fear is deportation back to the jungles of Vietnam, because that’s where they belong”. Newman symbolically labels the Vietnamese as uninhabited animals, signifying they cannot assimilate into civilised Australian civilization, and consequently, don’t fit into the Australian civilization. The point that Australia altered its policy and permitted refugees from Vietnam, eliminating the White Australia policy started a colossal conversion in the social and cultural elements of Australia. He uses inclusive language “they” to additionally emphasise the Vietnamese are not Australian and shouldn’t be here. This directed to a change concerning the white Australians and the Vietnamese, affecting this tornado to come without a warning. The white Australians retreated in terms of their civilization. This change headed to a destructive progress – a regression – representing that change doesn’t constantly lead to a good change. Change can lead to positive and negative risk, The Door,