In Vietnam 1975, Ha is in the middle of a war. Like many others that have to flee their homeland, know the difficulty of finding a way out. In “Inside Out and Back Again” Ha is escaping Vietnam ( her home country) to not go under control of the North. Many of the refugees in “World of Difference Benefit Luncheon”, “ Refugees: Who, Where, why”, and “ Children of War” go through the same difficulty as Ha, leaving their home/family, going to a refugee camp to somewhere they were not familiar with, fitting into their new home and country. Paragraph II: TIQA format---Ha as she was in Vietnam. Who she was? (Traits, values, beliefs)(Thesis) How is her story like other refugee stories? Evidence from pages 1-95 and at least one article that we read …show more content…
Ha’s story connects with the other stories through these traits, when “TiTi Waves Goodbye” in “Inside Out and Back Again” the refugees also wave goodbye to their home, friends, and family. “My best friend TiTi… she waves from the back window… They’re heading to Vung Tau, he says where the rich go to flee” ( pg. 10-11, LAI). “In My, my mom, my sisters, and I tried to escape from that part of town while our dad stayed ( behind at the house)” ( stanza 9, “Children of war”). Paragraph III: TIQA format---Ha “inside out”. Who was she as she had to flee and find home? (Traits, values, beliefs) (Thesis) How is her story like other refugee
In the novel “Inside out & Back Again” written by Thanhha Lai , The main character Ha flees her home due to war. Her and her family were looking for a new home trying to start a new life. Although it wasn’t easy for her to start a new life she had to learn to overcome many challenges. In the novel Ha reveals that her life is related to the refugee life even though it was unexpected. When refugees flee their home, it affects them when they leave and find a new home, it also involves affecting them when their life is turned inside out,and it demonstrates why they relate to the refugee experience.
Families and their traditions can impact on the level of devotion and affection that ties people together, as well as how one reacts to a particular situation that may reinforce or harm his or her relationships. The notion of family belonging is an idea repeated throughout The Happiest Refugee and the analysis of various techniques makes this evident. ‘But my father treated that loss as if it were a win, and it was a lesson that stayed with me for a long time. If the worst happens, but you still celebrate coming second. There is no need to fear failure’ is a quote from page 48 that highlights the level of family belonging through the use of repetition as it is a message that reoccurs throughout the memoir. The sole idea recreated throughout the novel thoroughly
In the novel “Inside Out and Back Again” by Thanha Lai, the universal refugee experience is expressed through the title, and Ha’s individual experience of fleeing and finding home. This essay will show the hardships of turning inside out and how hard it is coming back again. In “Inside Out and Back Again” an independent, determined girl named Ha flees her home in Vietnam because of war and poverty. Ha and her family flee to Alabama to start a better life. In Alabama, Ha faces challenges such as bullying, and racism that make her stronger to come back again.
Do you know what Refugees are what they do how they live and how they survive. Refugees are people that have to leave there home all because of war, they have to leave and find new ones far away. Before war happened in Vietnam Ha was different she was sneaky because when she went to get groceries she would by fried dough for herself, and she was mean because when she would hide her brothers sandals when she got mad at them. The title of the book makes you wonder a little by the words inside out and back again, the author Thanhha Lai had a good idea for making this book for a history lesson. Refugees like Ha and her family turn back again when they find better home like Ha she stared understanding more.
A refugee is a person that is forced from their home and often have to go to a different country. A refugee’s life is really dangerous and risky. In the book Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai Ha has to leave her country of Saigon. Ha is a 10 year old that has to leave her home due to the Vietnam war. Ha is childish because she whines every time her mom tells her to do something. Ha is also a rebel because when her mother told her that her brother must wake up first and bless the house. So then Ha wakes up before anyone else does and taps her toe on the floor. Ha is hopeful that the war will not come close to her house and that she will get to see her dad sometime soon. Ha is selfish because she keeps things for herself instead of giving
“Doesn’t the world see the suffering of the millions of refugees of Palestinians who have been living in exile around the world or in refugee camps for the past 60 years? No state, no home, no identity, no right to work. Doesn’t the world see this injustice?” (Ismail Haniyeh). This is how many of the universal refugees feel. There are millions of refugees all over the world in similar situations. This is also similar to how Ha feels in the book “Inside Out and Back Again.” Ha’s life mirrors the universal refugee experience because many lives are turned inside out, they have to get used to their new living arrangements, and they have to adapt to a new world.
All refugees, the circumstances notwithstanding, face immense hardship throughout their lives. In time, these hardships give way to new opportunities, dreams, and perspectives, as even in the face of suffering, one always retains their intrinsic self. Kim Ha, the protagonist in Thanhha Lai’s Inside Out and Back Again, experienced this through her family’s daring escape from war-torn South Vietnam. Consequently, Inside Out and Back Again serves as a fitting title for her story.
This essay is about the universal refugee experience and the hardships that they have to go through on their journey. Ha from Inside Out and Back Again and other refugees from the article “Children of War” all struggle with the unsettling feeling of being inside out because they no longer own the things that mean the most to them. Ha and the other refugees all encounter similar curiosities of overcoming the finding of that back again peaceful consciousness in the “new world” that they are living in .
Refugee people experience reliance inversion where the part of the parents movements to the evacuee tyke which turns him/her "back to front". This is found in Ha's story, evacuees in Canada and displaced people from Bosnia. Evacuees experience "back again" when they adjust to new changes. This is found in Ha's book and outcasts from Bosnia. The significance of "inside out" and "back again" identifies with the all together exile experience of escaping and discovering home and this experience is found in Ha's
In the book, Inside out and Back again, by Thanhha Lai, a girl named Ha and her family are forced to leave Vietnam and subsequently experience hardships and face many obstacles as refugees in their new life. Throughout the story Ha demonstrates how her stubbornness and curiosity transforms her dynamic character.
Ha’s story relates to these other refugees because they both go to the United States with little to no English and are trying to get by. They struggle with not getting jobs and getting picked on because they don't have the English and education as others
Ha’s life as a refugee is a life experience is something that only the strong can go through, and her entire family made it. When refugees flee home, it is because of fear that their family will be torn apart by the war when they leave home, family, friends, memories, basically the perspective of the person is leaving what they desired. Then when they finally do find a home, (not all), they are greeted with new challenges, one of many is that acceptance in their new home, some people probably don’t want to make a living in their new home, “But life happens wherever you are, whether you make it or not”. But when people turn “inside out” they feel empty inside and everything is useless, they have to start over from square one and become “back again”. When they become happy again and accept what has happened to them, so they can move forward in life. This book is mostly about a girl with her family who was in a war, so they left of fear of being torn apart by the war because they will be safer than where they are at in the moment, Saigon Vietnam, but are greeted with challenges in the Alamba U.S.A.
In the novel, “Inside out and back again,” written by Thanhha Lai is about a 10 year old girl named Ha faces many challenges throughout the war because they were forced to leave their home. When they, the refugees flee, they are going for safety, avoiding the war, and they go through so much fear. When refugees find a new home, they face, new people and they try to fit in the new community or a new culture that they are around now. Refugees feel sad when they are turned “inside out” because they had to flee home and they finally feel really happy when they are “back again” because they finally found a new home. Ha’s life is related to the common refugee experience because she faced everything that a refugee would go through. Ha’s experience is a specific example of the universal experience because she went through a lot like any other refugee would during a war.
Ha’s(from Inside Out and Back Again)father had gone to war and was captured by the Northern Communist and hasn’t come back since. On the anniversary of her father’s disappearance she explains, “Father left home on a navy mission… He was captured on Route 1 an hour south of the city by moped.” (Lai,12) Being a refugee, she had to leave her home and the hope that her father would one day come back home.
In the article, “Refugees: Who, Where, Why” it says, “This was certainly not the first example of people forced to flee their homes, and, unfortunately, it was not the last. Today, more than 14 million men, women, and children have been forced to flee their homes, towns, and countries because they are afraid to stay.” This shows that even if they wanted to stay they couldn't because all the series of unfortunate events are forcing them to flee. During, Ha’s journey she was also turned “inside out”. In the poem, it states “South Vietnam no longer exists… screaming without her country she cannot live.”