Millennium Approaches 1.1: Difference between revisions

Commentary
(Commentary)
 
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==Commentary==
==Commentary==
The opening stage directions of this scene tell the reader that the time of the play starts in late October. Comparatively, the end of the year approaching signifies upcoming change in the lives of people. This scene is also full of forshadowing. Like The rabbi even says at the end of the scene that soon "All of the old world will be dead" (Kushner 17). The rabbi seems to be simply going through the motions with this funeral, as he has with many funerals in the past. He admits that he never knew Sarah Ironson, but he knows what kind of person she was.


He then becomes the first character in the play to criticize what America has become. While reflecting on what Sarah wanted in life, the rabbi talks about how the Jewish forefathers struggled so that their children " would not grow up ''here''" (Kushner 16). He calls America "the meltingpot where nothing melted" (Kushner 16). By this, he means that America is composed of several groups of cultures, but they never really mixed, or melted, together. Such a divided community, the Jewish leaders think, was exactly what they were trying to run from by coming to the  Americas. 


==Study Questions==
==Study Questions==
#The beginning scene takes place at who's funeral?
#The beginning scene takes place at who's funeral?
#She is the grandmother of which character?
#She is the grandmother of which character?
#What is the only non-Jewish name of one of Sarah Ironson's grandchildren?
#During the rabbi's eulogy he tells the family that Sarah was the kind of person that brought the villages with her to America. Where did these villages come from?
#During the rabbi's eulogy he tells the family that Sarah was the kind of person that brought the villages with her to America. Where did these villages come from?
#What Great Voyages no longer exist?
#What Great Voyages no longer exist?
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