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In 'God Sees the Truth, but Waits,' forgiveness emerges as a central theme in the story-

building project. By showing the repeated failure, incompletion, or withholding of forgiveness in

earthly (or social) contexts, Tolstoy suggests that the only ultimately reliable and worthy form of

forgiveness is that of God's expiation, in which Aksyonov learns to trust. Importantly, Tolstoy

never specifically narrates the fulfillment of Aksyonov's divine redemption; he merely introduces

a protagonist (Aksyonov) who expresses profound confidence in the coming of this redemption

and who acknowledges that real, substantive forgiveness can be received only from God.

The final solution to the Holocaust or Hitler is a horrific massacre of more than 10 million

people killed by the Nazis and 6 million Jews. Thousands of starving and ill inmates with dead

bodies were shut in in 1945. These people were killed by crematoria and mass graves on account

of discrimination. Compared to Covid -19 pandemic, people starve to death as they're in lockout,

thousands of people are poisoned, sick and die the worst without proper funeral and only directly

to crematoria. Prejudice towards those who are infected is also apparent and some only wanted

them to die.

Open couple experiences insanity due to the wildly illogical agreement decided by married

pair. The man who has driven the idea stems more from his need to feel ashamed of his infidelity

than to save marriage. While the suicidal woman's approval became more ludicrous because of her

son's encouragement, the moment she agreed that her husband would be able to mingle with the

younger woman and her, despite their lifelong commitment to marriage, with another man as well.

Switch in plot is irrational because the man turned suicidal when the woman discovers her "Mr.

Right, I'm also doubtful at the end of the conversation, which the couple stayed as friends but

miserable due to the emotional pain it gave them.

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