War is war whether we like it or not but it is different for almost everyone. Actually, let me rephrase that, it IS different for everyone. There are similarities but the differences are really what matter, which is why I chose to compare Slaughterhouse-five the film Red Tails written by John Ridley, being that they are both within the same time frame ( World War II Era) . One theme that is contained in Slaughterhouse-five is the destructiveness of war, or how war affects a single soul verses an entire community. Although Billy Pilgrim in Slaughterhouse-five has led a successful post-war life, when he gets to war his views are totally transformed. It is evident as he attends his swimming lessons at the YMCA to the speeches that he gave at the Lions Club all to his imprisonment in Tralfamadore, as he walks in and out of the meat locker in Dresden where he seems to miraculously survive the fire raining from the sky in the city. As Billy Pilgrim is trying to get on with the normalcy of life, it is evident that he is trying to reach that spot of equilibrium as he puts the quote on his wall in Chapter 3, " Billy had a framed prayer on his office wall which expressed his method for keeping going, even though he was unenthusiastic about living." The quote that is he referencing to inspires him to give him the strength to move on, reminding him that he cannot change the past. Though this seems like a minuscule part of the text, I thought this was worth mentioning being that even though Billy is living the high life, war never really leaves him. He is always haunted by a vivid image or memory that war has left him.
So there you have it. It may seem brief in the details I mention, but destruction is destruction, there really isn't more to it. The Tuskegee airmen may have had to deal with being considered the lowest because of their skin color, but Billy Pilgrim had to deal with trying to bring himself back to reality, considering the fact that war was always in the back of his mind. The glamour of war was never as it seemed and did the opposite of what pretty much every soldier thought it would do. War destroys everyone in different ways and it's up to us to respect that.
Arlesia McGowan
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