Nien Cheng Question

I think that Nien Cheng asks herself the question “Would I not have behaved exactly as the Red Guards had done?” because seeing all of the normally calm, educated high school students pillage houses and ruin lives is hard. It is helpful to think that everyone has an animal part to them, and anyone who is guided to do those horrid things would do them. For example, the students had cut up her good fabric with enthusiasm, simply because they were told to by their mentors and rewarded for doing it. I do think that she would have acted as they did if she were in their situation because they were brainwashed. It said in Red Scarf Girl that all of the Chinese people who had not been alive before the time of Chairman Mao were brainwashed to follow whatever he said without question. She too would have been brainwashed, and done whatever she had to make Mao and her other mentors happy.

Perspective of Mom

I rushed up the stairs after work, trebling with adrenaline. At work I had heard that pictures of people wearing bourgeois gowns were considered fourolds, and I imagined a search party tearing through the photo albums of Xi-reng’s landlord family. I quietly treaded to where Xi-reng and Grandma were cooking diner. Whispering to them my thoughts, they agreed we had to do something. “We could throw them away,” Grandma offered.

“No, they could be found too easily,” Xi-reng commented, “But burning them would work. We could do that after diner if the kids go outside.” We agreed on that plan, and I began steaming the rice.

After diner, I asked Ji-li to go outside with her siblings. “We have something to take care of,” I told her. She reluctantly agreed, but I could tell she knew it had something to do with the Cultural Revolution. I wish she could understand that I was keeping her safe by not telling her. Xi-reng and I immediately went to work. He would tear out the fourolds memories, and I burnt them in a washbowl, watching them dissolve into ashes. The room quickly filled with a thick smoke, but we could not open the window very wide in case the neighbors saw the smoke pushing its way out. After a few minutes and many memories gone, we heard a knock at the door. I opened it a crack as to not let the smoke, and Ji-li and Ji-yun crawled in. They observed the situation, looking at the routine.

“Mom, this one doesn’t have long gowns or anything. Can’t we keep it?” Ji-yun asked pleadingly, gesturing to a picture that Ji-li had picked up.

“The Red Guards might say that only a rich child could ride a camel. And besides, Grandma is wearing a fur coat.” I replied hopelessly. The fire enveloped the memory, erasing the ink into a pile of ash. With that, we finished and I flushed the ashes down the toilet.

No one slept that night.

The Wave

300px-Great_Wave_off_Kanagawa2

We Came to fish,

Nothing more.

To make a living,

We are poor.

 

Now we wait,

The storm must pass.

We must make it,

For the rest of our class.

 

Families are waiting,

Relying on us.

Fish to sell,

Prices to discuss.

 

We Came to fish,

Nothing more.

To make a living,

We are poor.

 

I wrote an Ekphrastic poem based on the Wave print by Hokusai. The speakers of the poem are the poor fishermen who went into the ocean as they always did, but encountered a perilous storm. They wait for the storm to pass while their families wait for them to return. My A B C B rhyming pattern gives repetition to the poem, and in part symbolizes the repetitiveness of the fishermen’s lives.

Character Favorites in Seedfolks

In the book Seedfolks one of my favorite characters is Kim. Her father died eight months before she was born a Vietnamese farmer. She moved to Cleveland with her mother and big sister. When she was nine years old she planted some lima beans in hope of showing her dead father’s spirt that she was his daughter. People noticed her planting and watering the plants in the vacant, trashy lot and started to do the same. She indirectly started a community garden that brought people closer. Soon the garden was big enough to be a small farm, with people growing lettuce, goldenrod, tomatoes, and flowers. I also imagine how hard it must be for her every year when her family greave the father she never knew.

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