code of hamarobi
when father romero was raising the chalis and someone shoot him in the heart.
Hammurabi's code is similar to that of Rome's Twelve Tables. It was a central basis of law that created a set of rules, much like the United States' Constitution, so that Babylon would not be a lawless anarchy. The code also was bias towards the eldest male of the family (father, grandfather, and on occasion son). For example, if a child hit his/her father, then the hand they struck him with was cut off.
One of the worst things you can do is watch a movie and suspect that it follow the exact same outline as it is told in the book. Reading the book will be your best option. One of the biggest difference between the movie and book is the bat that is used by Roy Hobbs. In the Movie he takes the wood from a tree where his father dies. In the book he never really knows his father. Although his father was the one who taught him how to through a baseball, he want around much. As far as the bat goes he did get it from a tree which was struck by lightening.
Movie Struck - 1933 was released on: USA: 8 September 1933
Love Struck - 2012 was released on: USA: 14 July 2012 (Action Film Challenge)
Elie did absolutely not a thing when the Gypsy struck his father, it was for the fear of himself getting hit, and Elie's father did nothing, he didn't stand up for himself.
The gypsy struck Elie Wiesel's father because he asked where the toilets were.
Ele's father was struck for asking wher te oilets wher.
Zechariah, the father of John the Baptist.
wanted to make connections with her father
If a man has struck his father, his hand shall be cut off.
Elie's father was struck by the gypsy because he asked where the bathroom was and the gypsy thought he was asking for his wallet. The misunderstanding led to the gypsy lashing out in anger and hitting Elie's father.
he did absolutely nothing he was afraid he maybe hit and he was angry that his father didnt stand up for himself
He did nothing but just watch his father get beaten by another man.
He didn't help and just watched as his father was beaten. And, he never responded to his fathers dying calls (his father kept saying 'Eliezer' and Eliezer never responded out of fear of being beaten).
Elie has internalized the rules of the camp, the first of which is, do not attract attention to yourself. This incident occurs after brief orientation to life at Auschwitz, where an SS officer has explained that they each have a choice, Work or the chimney! In such a place, where brutality is the only constant, Elie learns quickly that any attachment, even to his father, can make himself a target. He is ashamed, but also filled with a burning rage: I shall never forgive them for this.
Elie Wiesel's father was beaten by a German officer when he continued to ask for water while being transported in a cattle car to Buchenwald concentration camp. The officer struck his father with a truncheon, causing his father's death.