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"The Jackboot flung me against a wall. I saw his hand go to his holster. I saw the gun come out and point between my eyes. "Die piglet!: The voice. I looked up. The red hair. The face. "Uri!" I cried, and the gun went off."
In The EarLobe Just Like The jackboot shot him
Uri hates Jackboots! Jackboots pick on Jews like him. He is not pretending to be one. He is a double agent trying to stay alive. Uri pretends to shoot Misha in the head but then moves the gun and shoots his ear to keep him safe as he said in the book "someday i will have to kill you to save your life". He did this to appease the jack boots so they will leave him alone and to save him.
retard go find the awnser yourself
In the book "Milkweed" by Jerry Spinelli, the character named Uri eats scraps of food and whatever he can find in the streets to survive. He is a homeless boy during World War II, and his resourcefulness helps him find ways to feed himself.
In the book "Milkweed" by Jerry Spinelli, Uri is portrayed as brave, protective, and street-smart. He looks out for others in the group, especially Misha, and demonstrates a deep sense of loyalty and friendship. Despite his tough exterior, Uri also shows moments of kindness and vulnerability.
In the book "Milkweed," Jack meets Uri when he discovers him hiding in his apartment building. Misha encounters Uri when he is roaming the streets and steals food from him. Both interactions lead to the boys becoming friends and forming a bond throughout the story.
The 4 main characters are: Misha, Uri, Janina, and Doctor Korzak. (for a brief description see the related link)
Naiive, ignorant, young, innocent, abnoxious, annoying, pest, orphan, stray, free
How did Mr. Milgrom try to shield misha and janina form the bombs?
Uri looks after Mischa and can be very hard on him. He wants Mischa to know how hard life can be but he always has the best intentions regarding Mischa's safety. Uri interacts with his friends, other Jewish orphans, but he can be described as a loner, seeing that he goes off on his own for awhile. Mischa even found him working in a hotel and later as a Nazi. Uri did NOT try to kill Mischa when he shot him. Uri purposely shot his ear so it looked like he killed him so Mischa would not have to be moved to a concentration camp with Janina.
The main characters in "Milkweed" by Jerry Spinelli are Misha Pilsudski, who is a young boy living on the streets of Warsaw during World War II, and the narrator, who remains unnamed throughout the story. The narrator shares Misha's experiences and observations as he navigates the harsh realities of war and the struggle for survival.
A pocket-picking orphan who thinks his name is "stopthief" tells of his experiences during the Holocaust. The story begins when he is about eight years old. A redheaded older boy named Uri finds Stopthief and takes him under his wing, introducing him to a whole group of young thieves. Uri gives Stopthief a new name and makes up his background, telling him he came from a large Russian gypsy family and was kidnapped and brought to Warsaw. He told him to remember that he was not a Jew. Despite Uri's efforts to keep Misha (Stopthief's new name) safe, the Polish and German soldiers relocated both the Jews and the pickpockets to the ghetto. Food was scarce and the soldiers were cruel. Misha's small frame, quickness, and experience stealing came in handy for him and his friends. Each night he snuck out of the ghetto through a small, two-brick gap in the enormous wall that separated the Jews from the Polish. He brought back whatever food he could find and fit through the small hole. In this manner, he saved his friends from dying of starvation. Uri became a soldier and made sure Misha did not get on the trains headed for the concentration camps. Young and naive at the time all this was going on, Misha did not understand the gravity of the situation. His version of the Holocaust is innocent, cute, and horrifying at the same time.