Atticus Finch To Kill A Mockingbird

Words: 839
Pages: 4

To Kill A Mockingbird is a book that integrates racism and the story of a family of a lonely, old town. The story takes place in Maycomb, Alabama where racism was very prominent and at that point nobody knew any better, except Atticus Finch. Atticus is the father of two children, Scout and Jem, and he shows them with bravery what is right and wrong throughout the entire story of their eventful childhood. Through all of the chaos that is happening within the town, Atticus still finds a way to keep his children safe and teaching them the proper way to treat others. Scout has great honor for her father and watches every step he makes, hoping to someday be like him. She takes what she learns from her father and it changes her for the better. What …show more content…
Atticus Finch. For Atticus to take the case in the first place shows how racism doesn’t affect him and he only does what is right, and in his eyes all he saw was a man needing help. Scout did not understand why her father took the case, but she was very interested in it and so was her brother Jem. They snuck into the courthouse with their friend Dill and watched the trial because they wanted to know why their father took the case and they were intrigued to watch their father defend a black man. Atticus did not just take the case and give up knowing he would lose, he fought hard all the way through the trial and did not give up showing his children true perseverance and justice. Atticus would have won the case if the jury and everyone involved weren’t such racists because he made Bob Ewell, the father of the victim, look so bad to the town which made Bob Ewell want to hurt Atticus’ family. Scout saw this and as she watched the trial unfold before her eyes she realized something. She finally understood why her father took the case and she understood the racism in the town and how they were completely split because of it. Although most children would just go along with what was happening because some adult just said so, but not Scout, she was different. She was just a child, but she portrayed intelligence almost making it seem as if she had a brain of an adult. The trial of this black man, Tom Robinson, changed her perspective and opened her eyes to the racial divide in her