Thread:Joanne Maniago/@comment-29570797-20161007184306/@comment-34597974-20161110164259

Solon75 wrote: @Joanne

Okay, what do you think we need to work in order for the idea to make sense?

For me, here is what I have came up with so far to try to make the idea work (But if you have any suggestions, then you are free to tell me what they are):

Amit- Age 33, born in 1981 (World Edition starts in 2014 in my arc). In 1981, Amit was a miricle child who was born to parents who were in their fifties. With that said, that means Amit's parent's were born in between 1929 to 1931. In 1944, both of Amit's parents and grandparents were captured and sent to Auschwitz. By 1945, only Amit's parents had survived. Their ages are between 14 and 16 years old and they are both orphans who are taken into foster homes with familes who also survived, which both familes that his parents are in become Jewish Christians. Fast foward to 2014, Amit's parents are now in their early eighties, with often failing health. For Amit, he has his parents, and some foster relatives. But he has dealt with hatred and prejudice for being a Jew. In middle and high school, he was beaten up badly due to racists classmates. After an incident his Freshman year, Amit then decided he would become a police officer, later homicide detective. Over the years, Amit heard countless tales of horror of what happened to his ancestors at Auschwitz. Hearing those tales did make Amit tug his heart out for all who were killed. With that said, when Amit finally is at Auschwitz, the main reason he's emotional is that he hears the cries of his ancestors and now fully sees the horror. Amit is also emotional due to the fact that it just breaks his heart to see the place where so many people, including his own ancestors, were killed for no reason. Amit's pain at seeing this shows clearly that he has mercy and compassion towards all people, he if they make him mad at times, and that it shows to Amit that no people should have to die because they are a certian religion, race, etc. That's the best I can come up with right now. What do you think? Good idea.