They took it with a stolen tractor and as I’m reading this I, myself is confused on why help do this in the cold? You already lost everything you had your husband you have no money and you still want to give and help; what makes you so strong that you have to keep doing this. Is their reward in helping this men? We find out that she is killed by a train and even her death was sad. She got no respect from her own family that she loved. There we so much negativity around her, and they selfish people didn’t care. The author of the story as a lot of connections with the story Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s “Matryona’s Home” is the name “Matryona.” The similarity to the word “martyr” is obvious. Matryrdom is the ultimate end of the road of self-sacrifice. This is a Christian notion that fits into Solzhenitsyn’s Russian Orthodox faith. A similar notion is found in Dostoevsky, who focuses on the suffering of Russia as a means to its
They took it with a stolen tractor and as I’m reading this I, myself is confused on why help do this in the cold? You already lost everything you had your husband you have no money and you still want to give and help; what makes you so strong that you have to keep doing this. Is their reward in helping this men? We find out that she is killed by a train and even her death was sad. She got no respect from her own family that she loved. There we so much negativity around her, and they selfish people didn’t care. The author of the story as a lot of connections with the story Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s “Matryona’s Home” is the name “Matryona.” The similarity to the word “martyr” is obvious. Matryrdom is the ultimate end of the road of self-sacrifice. This is a Christian notion that fits into Solzhenitsyn’s Russian Orthodox faith. A similar notion is found in Dostoevsky, who focuses on the suffering of Russia as a means to its