Preview

The Importance Of Family In Lilo And Stitch

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
92 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Importance Of Family In Lilo And Stitch
In Lilo and Stitch, the following quote was used,“‘Ohana’ means family. ‘Family’ means nobody gets left behind.” No one has the same past, which makes it hard and slightly impossible to understand where a person’s point of view is coming from, but it’s about the future and how we get involved trying to make it better. We can learn from our past to grow our communities in the spirit of a hopeful future by people sticking with each other, side by side, which educates the young victims for preparing for the future.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Ota and Shanice use their experiences and struggles to help their community in different ways, but they are similar as well. Ota uses his experience in boarding school involving destroying half of himself to grow that half of himself. In Would We Be Killed it says,”Captain Pratt never did manage to kill the indian within Luther Standing Bear. In some ways, you could say, he made that indian stronger.” Because of this experience he know runs a school at Pine Ridge Reservation. This shows that people learn more from traumatic experiences and help because of it more than helping because of a good experience…

    • 260 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Tom Brennan

    • 4567 Words
    • 19 Pages

    them of their pain and what our family now meant to this town.’ (p. 2)…

    • 4567 Words
    • 19 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Every human being is raised in different environment, interacts with different group of people, and face distinctive challenges and opportunities. These experiences play a major role in shaping people’s perspective and values. Therefore, people hold different opinions and are prone to make unique decisions that may be contrasting from you and even the story. In “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas,” the Omela community is living a joyful life because of the sacrifice of the innocent boy. The people who are leaving the town feel guilty about their happiness and decide to protect the boy’s rights: “But they seem to know where they are going, the ones who walk away from Omelas.” This clearly shows that the author advocates for the people who are leaving the town and are acknowledging their wrongdoings. The author values human rights and amendments more than her own individual happiness. However, for some people who rank happiness as their most important value, they will continue to ignore the existence of the boy and live in the town of Omelas. It is hard to blame the people who choose happiness, as it is their own values, but these polarizing viewpoints make the stories that contain moral decisions interesting. There is never a correct solution for…

    • 622 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ticking to his beliefs,Atticus Finch’s actions to defend a “black” man accused of the rape of a “white” woman affect how the whole family was treated and seen. At school Scout is made fun of by one of her classmates Cecil Jacobs when he announced that “Scout Finch's daddy defended niggers”(99).(new to Scout, doesn’t know the proper way to react, very defensive) Scout also get another taste of this at Finch's landing where Francis comments’ ”I guess it ain’t your fault if Uncle Atticus is a nigger-lover besides,but I’m here to tell you it is certainly does mortify the rest of the family...but now he’s turned out a nigger-lover we’ll never be able to walk the streets of Maycomb agin. He’s ruinin’ the family, that’s what he’s doin” (110).Francis is upfront about the situation and foresees …( the reaction of Maycomb to the Finches ie Mr. Ewell) to come. He touches upon the consequences that the whole family could endure because of Atticus. Atticus is essentially “ruinin’the family”(110). more specifically the family name. His actions to defend a “nigger” will cost his extended family humiliation and hatred because they too have the last name Finch; is now associated with Atticus, Tom, and the trial in Maycomb.…

    • 250 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In times of hardship, peoples true intentions can be seen. In the Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Junior switches schools for the better, but not everyone welcomes him with open arms. “And they shoved me to the ground and kicked me a few times. And spit on me. I could handle the kicks. But the spit made me feel like an insect. Like a slug. Like a slug burning to death from salty spit.” (Sherman 79) The students from Reardan showed their true intentions by kicking Junior to the ground and making him feel like absolute trash. When a person is going thought a time of trouble, people show what that person means to them with their actions.…

    • 121 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Family is a essential social unit consisting of parents and their children, The family is always considered as a group, even if they as dwelling together or not. In this essay I will explain the difference and seminaries of the family relationships. The following stories describe the difference and seminaries. In “ The Color of Family Ties, from the book Rereading American. The essay, The Color of Family Ties, has carried on the comparison in the difference of race, class, gender and elongated family involvement to Whites family, Blacks family and Latinos family to find their relationships between their kinships. This story describes gender, class, and race. The poem “Aunt Ida Pieces a Quilt” by Melvin Dixon is about a geriatric lady named Ida that makes a quilt for a boy named Junie who died from AVAILS. She acquires many different pieces of his apparel that denotes him and makes it into a quilt. This poem shows a bond between nephew and aunt. Every family is different yet alike. Even though there are different gender, Class and race when if comes to family theirs a value followed.…

    • 285 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    scars of a generation lost. Despite their problems they feel there is a longing for their homeland. A…

    • 263 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “There was a knock, and Oona turned and saw a small girl in the doorway. The child stood with eyes cast down just as Oona has stood before her grandmother. Oona said, ‘Come in, my child, and speak if you wish to do so’” (Broker). This quote connects to the theme because the small girl came to Oona to hear the stories of her people. Oona passed the traditions on to this girl and eventually it would be the girl’s responsibility to do the same. One reason why I chose this particular quote was because it shows how welcoming Oona was. Oona was reaching the end of her life and she feared future generations wouldn’t know the ways of her people because she hadn’t had many visitors to hear the stories. It was noticeable that Oona was very excited to have a visitor and share what her elders taught her. In her culture the elders customs are to keep the tribe’s traditions alive past their deaths. The elder’s do this by sharing the stories and telling them to anybody who’s interested. The quote also shows a custom of letting the elders always be the first ones to speak and looking down as these things show respect to the…

    • 815 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The meaning of this story first struck me as a journey back through the Kiowa history. Back through the time of his grandma, to the time when all had just begun. It is a platform that reflects Momaday's own background, sense of purpose and subsequent approach to the subject.…

    • 405 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    mnnm

    • 590 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Anaya states that elders can teach young people to live “authentic lives.” By this he means lives that have meaning and purpose achieved through hard work, faith, and a sense of community. Anaya states, “They learned that to survive one had to share in the process of life,” and that means sharing in the good and the bad. Anaya compares the eyes of the older generation to windows that “peer into a distant past,” and have a knowledge and spirit that comes from an understanding of the earth with which younger generations have lost touch.…

    • 590 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Chimamanda Adichie’s speech, a writer from Nigeria, elaborates that the single stories told by the media, peers, and family creates stereotypes and changes views on that person, place, or thing being mentioned, and that the single story should not define that being or thing entirely. At the beginning of the speech, Adichie stated as she grew up, there was a boy from a destitute family that had helped around the household. Adichie’s mother informed her daughter that the family was in poverty; for that Adichie had only looked upon them as poor, nothing else. Upon meeting the boy’s family, she learned they had woven beautiful baskets and that there was plenty more to them, rather than being indigent, thus falling for the single story. When…

    • 263 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    For Pueblo people story telling was the verbal chronicle of their existence, some stories were so sophisticated and detailed they could be used as map to trace up the herds of bulls or places to graze for sheep. And yet stories were so intertwined and layered that it could also contain the story of one's grandparents death or their own birth. It is note worthy that Silko named this part of her essay "Through Stories We Hear Who We Are" and indeed in stories we revel with our ancestors we understand their values, their priorities, their challenges and struggles, we relate to them so much more and it does clear up for us where we are coming from and maybe even "Quo Vadis"…

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Giver Community

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Jonas has grown up in a community without memories of pain, poverty, and war. Growing up without these memories, the community’s citizens do not know how to fight back for themselves or disagree with its leaders. Does this lead to perfect community? Yes, it does. Without the memories, all the people in the community will follow any directions that their leaders give them. An example…

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Home Is Where I Belong

    • 1146 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The sacrifices, the beliefs, and the values parents implant in their children will help determine the person they grow up to be. A child is like a sponge that absorbs their parent’s thoughts and viewpoints that will stay with them for the rest of their lives. A bad event can scar them for life. For example, if a parent constantly yells at their child for no reasons and shows no signs of love, the little one’s childhood would consist of nothing but bad memories. This is exactly what happened to Shelly, the Indian girl from the “Homecoming”. The female protagonist definitely suffered immensely due to the lack of parental love and the constant battles in the house. Her careless parents would never stop blaming her for every little thing causing her to run away from home at a young age. Because of the bad childhood and painful memories, Shelly turned her back against the most important person in her life; her father. By the time she started to appreciate him, it was already too late, he was on the verge of death. In the short story of the “Homecoming”, through the strong use of metaphor, symbolism and irony, Sunera Thobani stresses how a sudden can drastically alter the way one sees parental love.…

    • 1146 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Perhaps family itself was the value that we were missing the most—a sense of togetherness that would unify us much more than anything else could. Yet we never did make that connection. Instead we found it best to try and act as though we knew what a functional family was as though we were doing a bad game of Simon Says. As Gary Soto recalls from his childhood, “I tried to convince them that if we improved the way we looked we might get along better in life” (Soto, 29). That was the way my fake family was. We knew the meaning of values, but in reality we did not put them into practice, whether it be out of laziness or simple antagonism for those we may or may not have viewed as inferior to our bloodline. Seldom attention was given to the values…

    • 428 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays