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Summary Of William's Misunderstood

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William is misunderstood by his society because of their perception of him and their superstitious beliefs.
William’s society is very adamant when it comes to their culture, so when William was trying to build a windmill they were very skeptical. During most of the book William’s entire Village, including his mom, question what he's doing when he is in the junkyard. William’s Family can not afford to send him to school so to stay busy so William starts tinkering with fans, motors, and electricity. Many boys around Williams age are out school and they don't know what to do with their time so they smoke marijuana. William, however, dragged scrap yard materials to his home, and building windmill was all he was thinking about. People thought he …show more content…
“These students immediately told their parents about the crazy boy in the scrapyard, and soon my mother was getting an earful in the trading center. Now when I come home with my pieces, she stared at me and shook her head”(Kamkwamba and Mealer 189). William’s own mother thinks that he is smoking marijuana. His community does not understand what Williams intentions are, so without thinking they say he's crazy. This is a natural reaction because many people resist change in their life and change that they don't understand. Throughout the story many people would also refuse to give help to William he asked. For instance William was in need of a welder to weld a piece of metal but when he asked the welder for help everyone said told him not to help: “‘You want me to weld a broken shock absorber to a bicycle with one wheel?’ he asked, mocking me. … ‘Iwe, he's not a man- just a lazy boy who plays with toys. He's Misala’” (Kamkwamba and Mealer 189). His community has no idea what a windmill is but they have no problem criticizing it. They want to do whatever …show more content…
They believe that everything that occurs is because of magic. When a drought was occurring and no rain was coming down. they would blame it on magic. One day the clouds looked promising for rain, but then suddenly a wind blew the clouds away. Since William’s windmill relied on wind, the village believed that William’s windmill was some sort of witchcraft tower. “‘look, this giant fan has blown away the clouds. His machine is chasing away our rain!’ ‘This machine is evil!’ ‘It's not a machine- it's a witch tower…’” (Kamkwamba and Mealer 189). The village does not understand that the drought is occurring everywhere, not just in their village. Since their entire community looks up to witchcraft, they try and blame the drought on WIlliam’s tower. William is more educated than his society, so he is trying to explain something that is not in their realm of knowledge. “Many of them knew what my windmill was actually for, and a lot of them had even stood in line and charged their mobile phones. But pointing the blame at me helped them get over their fears of the upcoming famine”(Kamkwamba and Mealer 189). Even those who knew what a windmill was, were still trying to blame William for their troubles. This shows how superstition took over Williams community and how it changes people thought process when it comes to new and complicated situations. If his community could have

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