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Read Heidi (2002)

Heidi (2002)

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Series
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3.95 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0753454947 (ISBN13: 9780753454947)
Language
English
Publisher
kingfisher

Heidi (2002) - Plot & Excerpts

من منا لا يعرف قصة هايدي أو حتى جزء منها، تلك الفتاة الصغيرة المفعمة بالحيوية، لنرى السعادة والبهجة متمثلة في طفلة، ما يجعلي استشعر بجمال براءة الأطفال وصدق مشاعرهم، فعندما تقرأ في أدب الأطفال بلا شك ستشعر بالسعادة أو تشعر بقلبك يرفرف كطير سعيد في حين أكتضت بقية الروايات بالألم والحزن .. القراءة في أدب الأطفال شيء مريح، نراها تزرع المباديء والقيم لتسمو بروحك فتعانق طهر السحاب.. أبطالها براءة الأطفال وحيويتهم المعهودة حتى تتمنى لو ترجع طفلاً ترى الأمور ببساطة وبلا تعقيد ويرجع قلبك كقلوبهم أو كطهر مشاعرهم ونبلها.. قد تظهر مصاعب أو حزن ولكن الأطفال ببساطتهم قادرين على تجاوزها، أظن أنه من المهم الرجوع إلى مثل تلك الروايات لأنها تجعلني أفضل.. وبما أنه في أدب الأطفال دائماً هناك قيم ومباديء وفضائل يحاول الكاتب ترسيخها وغرسها في الناشئة، فهي مهمة بلا شك، والحقيقة لا يمكنني القول أنها كتبت للاطفال فقط فحتى الكبار يستمتعون بها وبكمية الجمال فيها.. ما يجعلني أقول أنها تستحق القراءة و بجدارة..عن الرواية وشخصياتها:في حديثي عن الخالة التي كانت تدعي بعنايتها بهايدي والتي قررت التخلص من الطفلة التي كانت تراها عائقاً أمام أطماعها، وذلك عندما حصلت على وظيفة جديدة، لتضعها عند رجل لم يُعرف عنه سوا القسوة والجفاء، ثم رجعت لتأخذها عندما أصبحت وسيلة لمزيد من المال لتضعها عند أناس لم يرحبوا بها بالشكل المطلوب، حيث لم تتوافر بها الصفات اللازمة، ومع اعتراض مدبرة المنزل نجد خالتها تتركها بسهولة، فتضع الآخرين في مأزق ثم تتركهم ليواجهوا الأمر بطريقتهم، في هذا الموقف بالذات تتضح شخصية الخالة اللامبالية، فهي غير مسؤلة وجشعة للغاية. أما الجد فبالرغم عما عُرف عنه من استهتار وعدم مبالاة وأن قلبه متحجر خالي من الرحمة والرأفة، حتى أن أحداً لا يجرؤ على الحديث معه، فقد كان يعيش حياة رتيبة، اعتاد فيها على الهدوء والعزلة يعيش فيها لنفسه ولا شيء غير ما يضمن له قوت يومه، إضافة إلى أنه لا يملك أي خبرة في التعامل مع الاطفال، فأن يفاجأ الجد بتربية طفلة صغيرة رغماً عنه وهو الذي عزل نفسه عن العالم لم يكن أمراً سهلاً، خصوصاً مع طفلة مرحة كهايدي، لتكسر الروتين الذي اعتاد عليه.. لكننا نتفاجأ بجد رحيم ومتعاطف، فلم يكن الجد كما عُرف عنه من اللحظة الأولى مع هايدي بل أدى واجبه ببساطة وتعاطف معها ولعل ما ساعده على ذلك ذكاء هايدي وفطنتها حيث لم تكن تطلب الكثير، وكانت على استعداد بتدبير أمرها بنفسها. أما هايدي فعفويتها وتلقائيتها وحبها للخير، وصدق مشاعرها وأحاديثها اللطيفة والمبهجة مكّنتها من أن تأسر قلوب من حولها وتكسب ودّهم، وتبعث روحها الأمل في وجدانهم، فتمتليء قلوبهم بالعرفان العميق، بينما المنافقين لم يتقبلوها لنفس الصفات، فيرون عكس ذلك ويجدون من الصعب التعامل معها لصراحتها وصدقها، أما في الحديث عن حياتها مع جدها فلم يكن الجد يحب أن يلزم هايدي بأي شيء فقد كان يحب أن يراها حرة كالطير لا شيء يقف في طريقها، ولم يكن من شيء أحب إلى قلب الصغيرة أكثر من ذلك، كيف لا وهي كانت تعيش مع جدتها الصماء التي كانت تخاف عليها من كل شيء فلم يكن بإمكان هايدي الابتعاد واكتشاف ما حولها، وفكرة عيشها مع جدها في هذا المكان الفسيح دون قوانين تحتم عليها البقاء في المنزل لشيء رائع بالنسبة لها. وبالطبع هناك مصاعب واجهتها هايدي، فهي لم تتلقى العناية والإهتمام الكافي من قِبل خالتها، ثم العيش في قصر كبير وسط المدينة الخانقة بعيداً عن الطبيعة وجبال الألب الشامخة، فلنا أن نتخيل كيف لطفلة محلقة كالطير أن تُحبس في منزل فخم كانت كطير جميل مغرد حُبس في قفص ذهبي يمنع حريته، والتهديدات التي كانت تطلقها الآنسة روتن ماير، والكبت النفسي حتى في تعبيرها عن أملها في العودة لموطنها حيث كانت تلقى التوبيخ على ذلك، مع ذلك كانت هايدي قوية وقادرة على مواجهة الظروف، التي قربتها من الله، وكل تلك المصاعب لم تمنعها من التفكير بغيرها وتقديم المساعدة لهم، وقد أثبت قابليتها للتعلم لكل ما هو جديد.وخلال الرواية عدة شخصيات تتعرف عليهم هايدي ويتعلق بها بعضهم (أسرة بطرس الراعي الصغير مع أمه وجدته العمياء، أسرة كلارا المقعدة، مع أبيها وجدتها ومدبرة المنزل وطبيب العائلة والخادم)ملاحظة: الصور التي أدرجتها من من الرواية ذاتها، وفيها العديد من الصور الرائعة لم أدرجها.. إهداء لمحبي الجميلة هايدي .. نسخة pdf :https://ia801903.us.archive.org/23/it...

My two favorite aunts gave me Heidi when I was eight years old. I don't know if it was Christmas or birthday; all I know is I have them to thank not only for this but for Anne of Green Gables (and my very favorite stuffed bear Snowball), bless their names forever. As with Anne, I read Heidi over and over (and over), and followed up with some of the sequels from the library, and loved it dearly; unlike with Anne, though, I haven't read Heidi in many years. The Goodreads Kindred Spirits group chose it as their "Akin to Anne" group read for last June, and I fully intended to join in then, but in the end it took being faced on December 30 with a Challenge shortcoming of two books for me to pick up what surely had to be a quick read so as to meet my goal. (It worked.) I was a little worried. Childhood memories are fragile. It doesn't take much to stain a current opinion, leaching backward to taint what was so beloved. But, I'm happy to say, Heidi came through it just about unscathed. Peter didn't, but I'll come to that. The story: Heidi is an orphan at six, and lives with her aunt until said aunt gets a job and decides that the girl's grandfather is just going to have to serve his time looking after the child, no matter how alarming his reputation is. Just about everyone Aunt Dete meets exclaims in horror at the idea of leaving the poor child with the old man, the Alm-Uncle; he hates everyone, and makes no secret of it. She's doomed. Dete is not an admirable character, but I will say for her that she is tough: she ploughs on despite the exclamations of horror and barely even gives the Alm-Uncle a chance to say no before she vanishes, leaving grandfather and granddaughter together. And it's fine. It's better than fine. Heidi flourishes, with her grandfather providing quiet but loving support and the goats and Peter providing entertainment, and her own active nature keeping her constantly occupied. And Grandfather flourishes a bit himself, softening and expanding a bit. And when that aunt of hers pops up again a couple of years later and sweeps Heidi away with her again to dump her on a wealthy household that needs a companion for wheelchair-bound Klara, Heidi's small following on the mountain suffers her loss. It was startling how much I remembered. I, who have trouble remembering details from a book I read last month, remembered the white rolls, and the kittens, and what happened to the wheelchair; I remembered the hayloft beds (maybe because I wanted one so badly when I was little) and the wonderful goats' milk and the other bed behind the stove. And it was all still very, very sweet. Except for Peter. I was taken aback by what a nasty piece of work he had the potential to be. I remember loving Peter. Perhaps that was because of the other books, but here – here he is selfish and lazy and greedy, and a little stupid. He shakes his fists at the interloper on Heidi's time, and then there's the wheelchair incident; he did damage. He was a little scary. If he hadn't had the fear of capture put into him, and hadn't had the Alm-Uncle's influence curbing his behavior, it seems like he might have ended up a serious problem. Heidi is a type of little heroine which I tend to doubt is written much anymore. Everything impacts her personally, from the grandmother's blindness to the tribulations of the goats. She's a simple, entirely selfless child with no desire to be anything else. She's not clever, per se; she can learn and learn quickly when she wants to, but she'd rather be out romping with the goats than reading. Which, now that I think of it, very likely has a good deal to do with her decline in Frankfort with Klara: she went from having hours of exercise in the fresh air, along with a simple diet (very simple – I was a little shocked at the amount of bread and butter and cheese and milk, and the paucity of meat and green vegetables) to almost no exercise and three meals a day of rich food (with more processed flour, at that). No wonder the child felt poorly. It wasn't just homesickness and worry over the elderly folk on the mountain. The rest of the cast of characters were very satisfying. Peter's mother and grandmother were drawn as simple, grateful folk; I've been trying to remember what it was that I read in which the poor characters continually refused gifts, even of things they needed desperately, because they could not accept "charity"; Peter's family had no such compunctions, and the gifts they received did what they were supposed to do: they gave joy to the recipients and the givers. I loved the doctor and Klara's grandmother – they were beautifully drawn. I wanted to smack Klara's father a bit, or at least to find out what was so very important in his business life that he had to abandon his daughter to the servants and the aptly-named Frau Rottenmeier for months on end. The French maid was surprisingly bitchy (though I can't help but wonder if some of her comments weren't effectively translated; they were delivered as cutting remarks, but read like cryptic non sequiturs). The butler, Sebastian, was a love. And, last but not least, I enjoyed watching the grandfather show a bit more depth and three-dimensionality by the end of the book. The affection I have for the book remains intact. I love it when that happens.

What do You think about Heidi (2002)?

Thanks to all the bowdlerized, Disneyfied stupidifications it's been through, poor old Heidi's story gets a bum rap. In fact, Heidi is no sap, and more to the point, her friend Clara with the wheelchair is no timid Victorian dying violet. Somebody plonked this great big book in my lap when I was seven years old, a good reader, and in need of something heavy to hold me down on a long car trip. It worked; it took me off from my flat prairie summer to a land of purple mountain peaks and jumping goats and snow that piled up above the windows in the winter.Heidi comes to live with her grandfather when she is five years old, up high on the mountain where he shuns and is shunned by the village below. For the next three years, she sees almost no one else but the goatherd, Peter, and his mother, grandmother, and the goats. She is never lonely; she is like a nature spirit, communing with the wind, sun, trees, eagles and flowers. It is only when her aunt comes to take her away to Frankfort, to be a companion to ill, housebound Clara, that homesickness and loneliness set in. Heidi's rescue concludes the first half of the book, the half most people know; how Heidi heals the people in her life is the second and more interesting half. I have returned to this book so often that my 1921 edition is all worn out and crumbly, with the plates falling out. Spyri creates a world I would like to live in. I don't know if it ever existed. There are elements of melodrama in the story that are sometimes too sweet for the modern palate, but the scenery is vivid and honest and the pathos is, for the most part, truly felt.
—Katie

I just finished reading Heidi aloud to the kids. What a sweet story! Heidi is a happy, optimistic girl. She loves nothing more than being on the mountain, enjoying the flowers and goats, as well as her beloved grandfather and neighbors.When she is taken away to live in the city with a wealthy family, to keep Clara company, both Heidi and her grandfather are very unhappy. Still, Heidi is able to form a deep friendship with Clara, who is ill and cannot walk.Soon enough, though, Heidi is able to return to her beloved mountain air.This Pollyanna-type book is full of joyful raptures, references to God and why he sometimes doesn't answer our prayers right away, loving relationships, forgiveness, and the joy of simple living.We loved this book. I have to say, it can get a little slow at times, so I recommend it for experiences listeners (whether young or old) who can delight in passages about beautiful flowers and such.
—Emily Beeson

من اروع الكتب التي من الممكن ان تصف البراءة , الخير, الجمال , السعادة , والامل الامل في رجوع ماهو جميل , الامل في رجوع السعادة والبهجة , الامل في تلبية الله لدعائنا ولو بعد حين , الامل في ان الله دائما بجانبنا لازم نحمد ربنا دايما على كل نعمة احنا فيها, لازم ندعيلو على طول [image error]
—Läylǿz

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