Themes in Freedom Writers
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Themes in Freedom Writers
Tolerance: class 203 English learn to respect & understand their differences- after they do this, they begin to work together and become successful. A turning point in the film is when Miss G. confronts the student’s intolerance (after Tito draws a nasty picture of Jamal). Earning respect & trust: Ms. Gruwell earns her students respect/trust. Eva & most of the students in 203 English come from a background where they don’t trust anyone until they have earned respect. Overcoming adversity: (adversity is hardship, problems or difficulties) Miep Gies. Finding success & self-belief: Anti-gang messages: many students in 203 English have strong gang connections and have been victims of gang violence. Eva and Cindy are linked to rival gangs. Inequality in education
Some memorable quotes…
Eva: In America, a girl can be crowned a princess for her beauty, and her grace. But an Aztec princess is chosen for her blood. To fight for her people as Papi and his father fought, against those who say we are less than they are, against those who say that we are not equal in beauty or blessings. Jamal: Man, what am I DOIN' in here, man? This ol' ghetto ass class got people in here lookin' like a bad rerun of cops! Andre: It's the dumb class cuz. It means you too dumb. Andre: My brother taught me what the life is for a young black man. Pimp, deal, whatever. Learn what colors to wear. Jamal: At sixteen, I've seen more bodies than a mortician. Eva: White people wanting their respect like it’s for free. Tito: What's a holocaust? Gloria: If you look in my eyes, you'll see a lonely girl. If you like at my smile, you'll see nothing wrong. If you pull up my shirt, you'll see the bruises. What did I do to make him so mad? Marcus: I sat there until the police came. But when they come, all they see is a dead body, a gun, and a nigger. They took me to juvenile hall. I spent the next few years in and out of cells. Every day I worry, when will I be free? Sindy: Does a refugee camp count? Sindy: During the war in Cambodia, the camps stripped away my father's dignity. He sometimes tries to hurt me and my mom. Brandy: I watched my mother being half-beaten to death, and watched as blood and tears streamed down her face. I felt useless and scared, and furious at the same time. I can still feel the sting of the belt on my back and my legs. One time he couldn't pay the rent. That night he stopped us on the street and pointed to the concrete. He said, "pick a spot." Erin Gruwell: Your bags are packed and you think the wine will give me a headache? Erin Gruwell: I don't want excuses. I know what you're up against. We're all of us up against something. So you better make up your mind, because until you have the balls to look me straight in the eye and tell me this is all you deserve, I am not letting you fail. I see who you are. Do you understand me? I can see you. And you are not failing. Marcus: That Miep Gies lady, the one that help hide her, I like her. I got all these other books about her from the library. Erin Gruwell: Wow, you used your library card? Marcus: Nah... Miep Gies: But even an ordinary secretary or a housewife or a teenager can, within their own small ways, turn on a small light in a dark room. You are heroes every day. Marcus: I've never had a hero before. But you are my hero. Miep Gies: Oh, no. No, no, no, young man, no. I am not a hero. No. I did what I had to do, because it was the right thing to do. That is all.