Jonas thinks about his experience on the playing field after watching his father release the baby because it was another instance of the community members not truly grasping the concept of death. His friends couldn’t understand that war was a serious matter because it involved suffering and death because they couldn’t understand why those were so bad, and his father couldn’t understand that the death of the baby just because it was slightly smaller than its twin was significant because he couldn’t understand the grave (pun unintended) significance of death. Jonas, however, can, as a result of his experiences of being a Receiver.
I think Gene is the most dynamic character since he changes so much in his liking to Finny. When reading you figure out how Gene is more a focused student and Finny is his close friend but envy’s Finny since Finny can get away with whatever.
At the end of the poem, the narrator lets the fish go.
A. Lets the fish go
The correct answer is c) to attempt to make sense of the atrocities he experienced. This is an autobiography, so it is a kind of recollection of his memories and trying to understand all of it. However, he also wanted to tell about his first-hand experience with Holocaust (just like in his novel Night), and to warn the humanity about the consequences of keeping silent and ignoring the evil until it grows so strong that it starts threatening the whole world.
The answer to this question is C