Welcome to the blog for Prof. John Talbird's English 251 class. The purpose of this site is two-fold: 1) to continue the conversations we start in class (or to start conversations before we get to class) and 2) to practice our writing/reading on a weekly basis in an informal forum.
Saturday, November 25, 2017
Rome, Open City
Two of the scenes that stuck out to me had to do with the Nazis. The scene with the drunk high-ranking officer telling the higher-ranking officer he has seen people the Nazis deemed inferior showing great character and courage. Character and courage that the officer in charge attributes to the "master race". He was a drunk man having a moment of clarity. The officer in charge believed wholeheartedly that the Italian man was going to talk. In the officer's mind, he would eventually talk due to the fact that he was part of a "slave race". To him, Italian people don't have strong character or that much courage. If the torture did not break him, that would mean there is no difference between the "master race" and the "slave race". The final scene stuck out to me also because it shows a few Nazi soldiers having some humanity when they refused to shoot the priest. Perhaps those particular soldiers respected the courage that he had shown and felt like they would be cowards to shoot a defenseless man of God.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Great reading, Christopher. Actually, in that last scene, those soldiers are Italian rank and file being commanded by the Nazi general. That's why they don't want to shoot the priest.
ReplyDeleteI agree, I believe the soldiers really did not wanted to kill tbe priest.It was heartless how the priest was made to witness the torching and suffering of the guy. It was also pain for the children to witness the priest being killed.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe that my family is in grief again. Its just a month and a few days, we had funeral. This is very hard
ReplyDelete