viernes, 17 de mayo de 2013

MY HERO


A hero is a human being, who has many different good kind of characteristics, which everyone is able to notice them. Heroes are the ones that made small things that make the difference. It can goes from helping an old woman crossing the road, to helping a whole country. The main requirements that a person most have, to be considered a hero are. First of all, give without expecting anything back, kindness, humble, truthful, selfless, wise, protective, take out a smile of a person by making people happy, shares his or her wisdom with others, so they can learn and be better people day by day. 

My hero is my dad. He has been always there for me and for all the people I know they have asked for help to him, and also for the ones that haven’t. His most important values and the ones that he has taught me since I was little were, humble, as my dad is a very simple man without possess and he always make people comfortable, he always said “never make a promise you will never fulfill”, he helps children by paying for their school every single year.

Besides helping people that he doesn’t know, he is always taking care of his whole family, and by this I mean, my uncles, aunts, cousins, etc. He will always be there for them and helping them unconditionally.

My dad is a very optimist person; he is always seeing the good side of things. He has a wonderful sense of humor, he will always make people laugh.

Every single person can be a hero if he or she wants it, they only have to make good things because they really feel them, and not only because what other people will think or said about them. My dad is a real hero, because he is a wonderful human being, always caring and worrying about others no matter what, and without expecting anything back. 
Nestorleont.files.wordpress.com (n.d.) Untitled. [online] Available at: http://nestorleont.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/941-super_hero1.jpg [Accessed: 13 May 2013].
 

 

jueves, 25 de abril de 2013

QUOTE

All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them- Walt Disney

This quote means nothing in life is imposible, every dream that we have can become real, but we have to really go for it no matter what.

For me this quote means that no matter what dream you have, by dream I mean goals, or any achievement that you wish in life, you need always to do your best, be constant, pacient, commited, devoted . You need over all to believe you can do it and most important trust in yourself. You know that there will always be ups and downs, obstacles, and many people saying that you can´t do it. These will make you stronger by always having a positive attitud and being optimist, but realistic. You have always to keep on going on your path, and hang on to it and never give up to your DREAMS .  

 

 

 

BrainyQuote (2001) Dreams Quotes at BrainyQuote. [online] Available at: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/topics/topic_dreams.html [Accessed: 25 Apr 2013].

martes, 16 de abril de 2013

PART III SUMMARY


Okonkwo returns to his village after seven years of exile, knowing that he had lost his place among the men who administered the justice in the clan. Umofia has changed a lot. The church has growth in strength and the white men set up their rules and judicial system. There is a discussion of the story of Aneto, who was hanged by the government after he killed a man. Obierika and Okonkwo finished the discussion by sitting in silence together.
Some people of Umofia are happy with the white men influence in their clan. Mr. Brown and Akunna meet often to discuss about their different points of views, including religion. Mr. Brown built a hospital and a school. He told Okonkwo that Nwoye is in a training school for teachers but he chose him away and behaved violently.
A man came to replace Mr. Brown, his name was Reverend James Smith, who was a strict and intolerant man and wanted every member of the village to obey to the letter of the Bible and disapproves Mr. Brown´s tolerant and unorthodox policies. Enoch Unmasked an egwugwu during the annual ceremony to honor the earth, this is considered as killing an ancestral spirit. The next day, the egwugwu burned Enoch´s compound the ground. They later gathered in front of the church to confront Reverend Smith and his Christians. They wanted to destroy the church in order to clean their village of Enoch´s. Smith said to leave the problem on his hands. They ignore him and burn the church.
Okonkwo and his people are on the guard and armed themselves with guns and machetes. The District Commissioner came and met with the leaders of Umofia. They went, but no sooner they put their machetes on the floor than a group of soldiers surprises them. They were all put in jail and suffered insults and physical abuse. A fine of two hundred and fifty bags of cowries was asked to set them free. A day later, the clan decided to collect the cowries to pay the fine and set them free.
The prisoners return to the village, they were very bad looking that the women and children were afraid to greet them. The village crier announces a meeting for the next morning. But Okonkwo decides on a course of action to which he will stick no matter what the village decides. He took out his war dress. The meeting is packed with men from all the clan´s nine villages. During the meeting five court messengers approach, their leader orders the meeting to end, but Okonkwo killed him with two strokes of his machete. Unfortunately the villagers allowed the messenger to escape and concluded the meeting. Okonkwo understood that his clan will not go to war. He wiped his machete from blood and left.
Finally Obierika agreed to lead him. They went behind a small bush and discovered Okonkwo´s body dangling from a tree. He has hanged himself. Obierika explains that suicide is a grave sin and his clansmen may not touch Okonkwo´s body. The commissioner, who is in the middle of writing a book about Africa, imagines that Okonkwo´s death will be an interesting paragraph but not an entire chapter. The title of his book will be “The pacification of the primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger”.
ThingsFallApart. [online] Available at: ThingsFallApart part IIl [Accessed: 15/04/2013.
 


viernes, 22 de marzo de 2013

PART II SUMMARY


Part number II from the book Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, starts with Okonkwo´s exile from his clan. He started a new life in a different place and clan. He was received by his mother´s kinsmen in Mbanta and by an old man who was his mother´s youngest brother, Uchendu. Okonkwo was “taking his family of three wives and their children” to look for some refuge in his motherland. He was given a part of land and he and his family worked very hard to plant and build a new farm.

Few days after Okonkwo arrival, there was going to be a wedding ceremony as Amikwu, the youngest of Uchendu´s five sons was marrying a new wife. In the ceremony the sister in law will ask questions to the bride such as “How many men have lain with you since my brother first expressed the desire to marry you”? From that day the bride Amikwu will take the young bride to his hut and she became his wife. Two days after the wedding Uchendu gathered all his sons, daughters and his nephew Okonkwo. He wanted everyone to know why was Okonkwo with them today and let everyone asked questions about this fact…”Why is Okonkwo with us today?”…”a man belongs to his fatherland, not to his motherland”.Uchendu replied that he wanted Okonkwo himself to give the answers, but Okonkwo replied..” I don´t know the answer”. Then, Uchendu said that he didn´t know the answer because he was still a child even though he had three wives, he then continued saying that..”it´s true  that a child belongs to his father”, but when a father beats his child, it was ok for him to look for love and comprehension in his mother´s hut.

Two years passed from Okonkwo´s arrival when Obierka his friend came to visit him. He came with two young men, each of them were carrying a heavy bag on their heads. Obierka started to tell the story about a white man who came to their clan during the last planting season….and “he was riding an iron horse”… The elders of the clan consulted the Oracle and it told them that the strange man would break their clan and spread destruction among them, and that other withe men were on their way. So, they killed him and the point is that he didn´t say anything when they killed him, not a word. For many markets weeks nothing happened, but one day three white men and a very large number of other men surrounded the market and began to shoot. Everybody was killed, except for the old and the sick because they were home. Their clan was completely empty.  The message that Obierka wanted to give with this story is “never killed a man who says nothing”. Then, Obierka pointed at the two heavy bags and said that it was the money from Okonkwo´s yams and gave it to him.

Two years later Obierka came to visit his friend in exile again, but this time things were not very happy because the missionaries had come to Umofia and had built their church there, won a lot of converts and were already sending evangelists to the other towns and villages around them. Obierka found out that Nwoye was already one of them but he could barely talk to him. He came back to talk to his friend Okonkwo but he didn´t say a word. It was Nwoye´s mother who explained Obierka what was happening and told him that those missionaries said that there was just one God and they worshiped him all the time with strange songs and noises in the church and that Nwoye was unfortunately one of them now.

Things Fall Apart. [online] Available at: Things Fall Apart Part II [Accessed: 21 Mar 2013].

lunes, 11 de marzo de 2013

CHAPTER 15 MOTHER KITE STORY


“Never kill a man who says nothing”, this is how Uchendu starts telling the story. The story is about an eagle called Mother Kite, who one day sent its daughter to bring some food; the daughter came back with a ducking. Its mother said it was fine but she wanted to know what did the duckling´s mother said when she took the duckling away from her. The daughter answered that it said nothing and just walked away. Then, Eagle Mother Kite told her that it most returned the duckling, because there was something hidden behind the silence, so the daughter went back and returned the duckling and took a chick instead. When she came back her mother asked again what did the mother of the chick did and the eagle daughter answered that it cried, raved and cursed her. After that, Mother Kite said that there was nothing to fear because it shouted, and “There is nothing to fear from someone who shouts”, so they could eat the chick.

After reading this story I could understand that the message that Uchendu wanted to give is that we most fear or be careful with people that doesn’t speak or doesn’t express feelings, that to the ones that are always yelling, screaming or preventing us about their acts. Because when someone is going to do something bad to you he or she will do it, without preventing or telling you. For example, a robber will not prevent you when he is going to robe you, he will just go and do it. On the other hand, people who will be telling you that he or she will be doing something bad to you; they will probably never do it.  There is a Mexican proverb that says “Perro que ladra no muerde”, this means that “dog that barks will not bites”.



Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
 
 

miércoles, 27 de febrero de 2013

SUMMARYCHAPTERS 7 - 13


Ikemefuna lived with Okwonkwo´s family for 3 years, until Okwonkwo kill him. He help Nwoye to be responsible and more masculine, he was like a guide to him. The time came when Gods told Okwonko that it was time to kill Him. After that, Okwonkwo said to Ikemefuna that he needed to return back to his village. When they were on their way, a man came out and hit him with a machete; Ikemefuna was in such a deep pain and Okwonko started feeling pity for him. As Okwonko didn’t want anyone to realize that he had feelings for Ikemefuna, he finally killed him himself.

After killing Ikemefuna, Okwonkwo fell in a deep depression. He went to visit Obierika, she was looking for her future son-in-law. Okwonkwo started feeling better day by day.

Days pass Enzima started feeling very sick, she´s Ekwefi´s only child. A medicine man told them that an “ogbanje” which is like a wicked child, was the cause of her illness.  Days later the village holded the “egwugwu”; this ceremony consist, the men got masked and they emerged from a secret house where women are not allowed and it´s an spiritual ceremony were ancestral spirits came.

Meanwhile Enzima´s mother, Ekwefi started to tell her daughter a story about a tortoise and other birds.  Chielo came to inform Ekwefi and Okwonkwo that the God of the hills and caves Oracle wanted to see Enzima. The mother followed Chielo to the cave with the intention to save her daughter even against the Gods. Okwonkwo arrived with a machete and calmed her.

At dawn, Chielo took Enzima back from the cave. Okwonkwo was really worried. It was time for Okwonkwo´s family to prepare Obierika´s daughter´s Uri the Betrothat Ceremony in which all the village will help with food and the mother got a coat. But there was an interruption when a woman was running after a cow.

Finally, the dead of the elder Ezeudu was announced with a musical instrument called “ekwe”, this for the other villages to know it. At the ceremony which is a big funeral men usually beat drums and fire their guns. Okwonkwo accidentally killed one of Ezudu´s  childen with his gun. As this is a crime, Okwonkwo was exhilated with all his family and they went to Mbanta.