An important factor that I think determines protagonist Elisha's actions throughout the book is his internal struggle to belong. After losing his family to concentration camps, Elisha has no choice but to choose a life of fighting for the Jewish resistance if he does not want to spend his time being homeless in the post-World War II era. At first, he finds a sense of the family he had lost in the comrades that become apart of his unit, until he receives strict orders to shoot a British captive and wonders whether there will be any distinction between him and a German Nazi after the killing. The thought of that possibility becoming true terrifies Elisha, frustrating his friends into trying to persuade him to disregard his confidence and do what's best for the group. In the end, they succeed, and Elisha gives in to killing the man regardless of his internal struggle. This scene presents a commonly asked question in the mind of anyone who's ever struggled with attempting to belong: how far will I go to prove my worth to others, to fit in? Elisha's desperation to replace the void his family left blinded him from seeing the difference between manipulation and innocent persuasion. Innocent persuasion was far from what his comrades did to get him to level himself with a Nazi. What Elisha has done is only going to deepen the hole inside of him. He has become what had killed his family.
I commented on posts by Leanne and Hailey.
I commented on posts by Leanne and Hailey.
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