However, Bereyter could not stand working for the forces that endeavored to eliminate his race and homeland. Although Bereyter was a quarter Jewish he did not have to face torture and ostracism at the hands of the Nazi's, he was considered German enough to serve in the Nazi army. Part two of the book sees the narrator's primary school teacher Paul Bereyter who was a quarter Jewish. Selwyn commits suicide by putting a gun in his mouth. Selwyn confides to the narrator his estrangement from his wife and his inability to assimilate to England because of the lingering memories of his childhood and his homeland. The doctor's increasing alienation in a foreign country leads to an inevitable detachment from his present reality. Henry Selwyn who had emigrated from Lithuania to England. We are thankful for their contributions and encourage you to make your own. These notes were contributed by members of the GradeSaver community.
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