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Consider the methods of survival that Viji, Rukku, Aral, and Muthu employ to navigate daily life in the city. How do their means of survival help to develop the theme of The Creativity and Resourcefulness of People Experiencing Poverty?
Teaching Suggestion: This Discussion/Analysis Prompt invites students to connect their responses from the Personal Connection Prompt in the context of the novel. Throughout the novel, each of the children must make difficult decisions regarding what little money they save or earn; with most of their expenses going to food, purchasing other items is particularly difficult, even with necessities such as protective gear to create shelters and medicine for illnesses. Viji is faced with this decision when she sells their dog Kutti to a wealthy family in order to buy medicine for Rukku and Muthu. Students might benefit from small group discussion or the opportunity to work with a partner to locate and cite strong examples from the text before engaging in whole-group discussion or a Socratic seminar.
Use this activity to engage all types of learners, while requiring that they refer to and incorporate details from the text over the course of the activity.
“Global Landfills”
In this activity, students will research and prepare a presentation regarding global landfills and their effect on the local environment.
In the novel, many of the children who experience housing and food insecurity depend on the local waste dumps in order to survive, sifting through the garbage for salvageable materials. Working in small groups, research and present information on a similar landfill to the class. Use the following questions to guide your research:
After researching your topic, practice your presentation with your group before sharing with the class. Participate in a class discussion regarding the similarities in the landfills, particularly regarding connection to the themes of The Presence of God in the Face of Suffering, The Creativity and Resourcefulness of People Experiencing Poverty, Male Domination and Feminine Powerlessness, and The Richness and Beauty of the Insignificant.
Teaching Suggestion: This Activity provides students the opportunity to make real-world connections with a major motif of the novel through group work and oral presentation. Each group should select a different landfill on which to focus their research. As an entry point, Wrights’s The Rent Collector is a fictional adaptation of a true story of a young woman who lives in Cambodia’s largest waste dump.
Differentiation Suggestion: For an extended writing approach, the above Activity may be offered as a research paper. Students can use the questions to guide their writing process. Depending on the level of the class, students might benefit from introduction to or review of standard research paper process (initial research, annotated bibliography, thesis, outline, note taking, drafting, revising, editing).
Use these essay questions as writing and critical thinking exercises for all levels of writers, and to build their literary analysis skills by requiring textual references throughout the essay.
Differentiation Suggestion: For English learners or struggling writers, strategies that work well include graphic organizers, sentence frames or starters, group work, or oral responses.
Scaffolded Essay Questions
Student Prompt: Write a short (1-3 paragraph) response using one of the bulleted outlines below. Cite details from the text over the course of your response that serve as examples and support.
1. Christians typically believe that there is a benevolent God. One of the most frequent criticisms of Christian beliefs is called “the problem of pain”: If there is a good God, why is there so much suffering in the world?
2. Consider the way that Viji and Rukku are treated in terms of their gender.
3. Through characters’ choices and decisions, the novel shows how they feel about others’ poverty or wealth.
Full Essay Assignments
Student Prompt: Write a structured and well-developed essay. Include a thesis statement, at least three main points supported by text details, and a conclusion.
1. By running away, the sisters avoid familial abuse but endure hunger, squalor, danger, sickness, and more. In a 3- or 5-paragraph essay, determine whether running away is a good or a bad choice. Are the sisters justified in running away? Should they have stayed? Support your argument with examples from the story.
2. In the final chapter, Viji writes to Rukku that her assumption was upside down; she believed she was caring for Rukku, but in actuality, it was Rukku who provided for and guided Viji. What are some examples throughout the text of Rukku guiding Viji? In what ways does the outcome of the story impact Viji’s feelings about Rukku? In a 3- or 5-paragraph essay, explain whether Rukku is a hero or a victim in the story. Provide support for your argument with evidence from the text.
Multiple Choice and Long Answer Questions create ideal opportunities for whole-text review, exams, or summative assessments.
Multiple Choice
1. Which of the following words best describes Appa’s behavior toward Amma?
A) Abusive
B) Adoring
C) Altruistic
D) Apathetic
2. Which of the following reasons best describes why Viji writes her novel in a second-person narrative?
A) She is talking about herself.
B) She is writing a letter to her sister.
C) She is trying to have her readers feel closer to the subject.
D) She is speaking about memory from their childhood.
3. Based on her initial interaction with Arul and Muthu at the bridge, which of the following sentences best describes Viji’s character?
A) She is quarrelsome.
B) She is meek.
C) She is determined.
D) She is easygoing.
4. As Viji reflects on her sister’s new friendship with Muthu and Arul, she writes, “Now you threw back your head the way Muthu was doing. And as the three of you howled away, like a pack of jackals, hungry and homeless though we were, I felt I’d done the right thing by leaving.” Which of the following literary terms does Viji use in this quote?
A) Metaphor
B) Simile
C) Personification
D) Allusion
5. Based on Arul’s characterization, with which of the following statements would he most likely agree?
A) Hinduism is the only true faith.
B) Praying is a sinful act.
C) Heaven and hell do not exist.
D) Having some religion is better than having no religion.
6. Which of the following words best describes Arul and Muthu’s feelings about formal education?
A) Elated
B) Disinterested
C) Serious
D) Anxious
7. Which of the following tactics does Arul use in order to make “climbing the Himalayas” more appealing?
A) He makes it a game.
B) He makes it a theatrical production.
C) He makes everyone work for him.
D) He makes the waste man give them more money.
8. Which of the following phrases best describes how the children use the money they earn as income?
A) For survival
B) For gambling
C) For savings
D) For travel
9. Which of the following sentences best describes how Viji views charity?
A) She believes that rich people should provide charity to her sister.
B) She is generally too proud to accept it.
C) She always takes as much as she can get, no matter the source.
D) She considers it to be an act that only Christians offer.
10. Which of the following sentences best describes how Viji feels about taking Rukku to Celina Aunty?
A) She believes she made the wrong decision to bring her to the hospital.
B) She regrets not taking Rukku sooner.
C) She fears that Celina Aunty will lose her temper.
D) She dismisses any help from mother-like figures.
Long Answer
Compose a response of 2-3 sentences, incorporating text details to support your response.
1. How does the setting of rural and urban India shape the characterization and plot?
2. In what ways do Arul and Muthu become a kind of family for Viji and Rukku?
Multiple Choice
1. A (Various chapters)
2. B (Various chapters)
3. C (Chapter 8)
4. B (Chapter 9)
5. D (Various chapters)
6. B (Chapter 13)
7. A (Chapter 20)
8. A (Various chapters)
9. B (Various chapters)
10. B (Various chapters)
Long Answer
1. The novel is set in rural and urban India. Through the plot and character conflicts, Venkatraman highlights the real atrocities of unhoused and abused children who are forced to navigate the dangerous streets of urban India. These conflicts and challenges underscore the resourcefulness, determination, and resilience of the children. (Various chapters)
2. Muthu and Arul provide knowledge and support to Viji and Rukku in their attempts to survive on the streets of urban India. The boys welcome the girls to their home under the bridge by the girls’ second night after leaving their parents, even obtaining a shelter for the girls to use. The boys, experienced ragpickers, teach the girls about this lifestyle. They form a kind of family unit emotionally, helping one another, making one another laugh, and caring for each other. They also discuss topics such as religion and the future, helping one another see a variety of viewpoints without judgment. (Various chapters)
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By Padma Venkatraman
Brothers & Sisters
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Indian Literature
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