Relate three incidents that illustrate that Jenkinville, Arkansas is a bigoted community
The residents of Jenkinsville demonstrate their bigotry through their actions and utterances, and this is clear throughout the book. They come across as racists and religious extremists.
Chu Lee, a shop owner of Japanese descent, abruptly closes his shop and seemingly flees Jenkinsville. Although Patty does not comprehend it, she actually overhears Mr. Jackson declare his involvement with other members of the community in Chu Lee’s sudden closure of business and departure. He tells Patty’s father, “Our boys at Pearl Harbor would have got a lot of laughs at the farewell party we gave the Chink.”
After Patty meets Anton at the store, she is taken by him and is eager to share her encounter with someone who would understand her feelings. With much excitement, she tells Edna Louise, her classmate who has a reputation for boys. However, after Patty reveals her love interest to be a German prisoner of war, Edna responds with utmost disdain by saying, “That’s almost as bad as going out with a nigger.”
When the FBI visit the Bergen family to question Patty about her connection with the fugitive prisoner of war whom they suspect could be getting assistance from an insider, Mr. Bergen defends his daughter’s loyalty to America. He says that she “wouldn’t spit on a Nazi if his body was on fire.”
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