Souma

In the section that I read today, Ibtisam and her family, besides her father, had made it inside of the shelter that they had discovered. The shelter was a three-story house, but it was no bed and breakfast. There were people running frantically all around the house and up and down the stairs, and then there were people hiding in the corners because they were so scared of the war breaking out.

Ibtisam went into the basement of the house and sat in a corner away from everyone else. Then, as she was looking around, a baby donkey walked up and stood next to her. She carried on conversations with the donkey and she even named it, Souma. Ibtisam stayed with Souma until she could no longer hear the air raids and then she started to quietly crawl back up the stairs to find her family.

Reading this section warmed my heart a little. Knowing that the family made it to about as much safety as possible and also that the narrator was able to find a friend on the way just makes me feel good. I believe that it is always a good sign for a child to become friends with an animal, because they are a companion that will always be there for them and I think that the narrator becoming friends with Souma is a good thing. I just hope that nothing bad happens to either of them.

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