Guy, his wife Lili, and their son Little Guy reside in a “one-room home” (Danticat 226), in the “shantytown” (Danticat 230) section of Haiti. This is the poor and very low-income area. This situation stemmed from the reduced amount of steady work, making it hard for one to provide for their family. This reality is very difficult for Guy to deal with, and it acts as a huge weight on his shoulders. Many days go by with Guy unable to find work, resulting in the lack of food for meals. On these occasions, the family is reduced to making what Lil calls “sweet water tea” from sugar cane pulp, and “a pinch of salt under the tongue to suppress there need to eat (Danticat 229). There is a nightly ritual within the community to gather around “a large television screen in an iron grill cage” (Danticat 230), to view the news. This viewing is under the supervision of the local law enforcement, and is only “state-sponsored news” (Danticat 230), a symbol of the control and oppression which tore at Guy. Guy and Lili are extremely loving and compassionate parents. It is love that drives them to disregard this ritual, and continue past to a field near the sugar mill. Here they spend time as a family, avoiding any exposure of their young naïve son to this measure of control. They would do anything for the protection and betterment of their only
Guy, his wife Lili, and their son Little Guy reside in a “one-room home” (Danticat 226), in the “shantytown” (Danticat 230) section of Haiti. This is the poor and very low-income area. This situation stemmed from the reduced amount of steady work, making it hard for one to provide for their family. This reality is very difficult for Guy to deal with, and it acts as a huge weight on his shoulders. Many days go by with Guy unable to find work, resulting in the lack of food for meals. On these occasions, the family is reduced to making what Lil calls “sweet water tea” from sugar cane pulp, and “a pinch of salt under the tongue to suppress there need to eat (Danticat 229). There is a nightly ritual within the community to gather around “a large television screen in an iron grill cage” (Danticat 230), to view the news. This viewing is under the supervision of the local law enforcement, and is only “state-sponsored news” (Danticat 230), a symbol of the control and oppression which tore at Guy. Guy and Lili are extremely loving and compassionate parents. It is love that drives them to disregard this ritual, and continue past to a field near the sugar mill. Here they spend time as a family, avoiding any exposure of their young naïve son to this measure of control. They would do anything for the protection and betterment of their only