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i eat MASSIVE amounts of spaghetti.
Sugarcandy Mountain is an allegory of Heaven. Moses is an allegory for the Russian Orthodox Church.
He talks about Sugarcandy Mountain, where he says animals go when they die but only if they work hard. He represents Rasputin.
Napoleon allows Moses to return and tell stories of Sugarcandy Mountain to manipulate the other animals and maintain control over them. By promoting the idea of a rewarding afterlife, he distracts the animals from the harsh realities of their current lives and discourages dissent. Moses' tales serve as a form of propaganda, reinforcing the notion that suffering in the present can be alleviated by hope for a better future, which ultimately benefits Napoleon's regime.
Moses's stories about Sugarcandy mountain provide comfort for animals lacking moral on Animal Farm. Moses and his religiously symbolic appeasement actually benefits the pigs as the animals are diverted.
Moses the Raven is an old crow who occasionally visits the farm, regaling its denizens with tales of a wondrous place beyond the clouds called Sugarcandy Mountain, where he avers that all animals go when they die-but only if they work hard.
The promise of Sugarcandy Mountain represents a deceptive hope that distracts the animals from the harsh realities of their lives and the need for rebellion against oppression. By promoting the idea of an idyllic afterlife, it undermines the principles of Animalism, which emphasize self-determination and collective action for a better present. This false belief can lead to complacency among the animals, making them less likely to fight for their rights and freedoms, ultimately weakening the rebellion's resolve and effectiveness. Thus, it serves as a tool for manipulation by those in power, reinforcing their control over the disillusioned populace.
Religion is represented in Animal Farm through the character Moses, who represents organized religion in the form of Sugarcandy Mountain, a metaphorical heaven the animals are promised in the afterlife. Moses serves to pacify the animals and keep them in check by offering false hope. The pigs use Moses to maintain control over the other animals by giving them something to believe in beyond their current harsh reality.
The situation had grown worse for the workers, so Moses is allowed back to tell them the tale of Sugarcandy Mountain, in order to give them something to look forward to. Of course, Sugarcandy Mountain does not actually exist, and is simply a way to continue to exploit the workers.
Sugar Candy Mountain is a place talked about by Moses the Raven. He tells the animals that it is a magical place where food is plentiful and no one works. Since Animal Farm parallels Soviet Russia, Sugar Candy Mountain represents religion and the idea of heaven. Moses is permitted by Napoleon to tell his stories because the animals believe they will go to Sugar Candy Mountain when they die; this makes them work harder.
Animals that live on a mountain
Moses the Raven represents religion in Russia at the time, something that helped people bear the hardships, demonstrated by Moses, who tells of Sugarcandy Mountain. --- He represents the Russian Orthodox Church. Moses tries to turn the animals away from the rebellion that the pigs lead. He is loyal to the Joneses as well.