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In Chapter 6, Christmas flashes back to his early childhood at the orphanage and his adoption by McEachern. The chapter ends on a note of situational irony, as the matron tells McEachern that he is free to change the child's name:
They were in the matron’s office; he standing motionless, not looking at the stranger’s eyes which he could feel upon him, waiting for the stranger to say what his eyes were thinking. Then it came: “Christmas. A heathenish name. Sacrilege. I will change that.”
“That will be your legal right,” the matron said. “We are not interested in what they are called, but in how they are treated.”
The matron claims that the orphanage is interested in how the children they adopt out are treated. The implication is that the orphanage wants to protect children from abuse. In theory, this is one of the reasons why orphanages were first established. Society began to understand that children were vulnerable and that not all of them had caregivers who could support them. Orphanages were supposed to be a social service to address this problem. However, it is ironic that the matron would care about Christmas's treatment now, after allowing Hines and the Dietician to mistreat him his whole life. Furthermore, McEachern turns out to be horribly abusive. The orphanage clearly does not have a thorough vetting process for adoptive parents.
Even the idea that respect for a child's name is irrelevant to how they are treated is ironic, especially for an orphan with unknown parents. At the age of five, Christmas has already developed a sense of shame about who he is and where he comes from. The question of his identity will plague him his entire life, and it will eventually lead to his brutal murder. The matron either does not understand that a child's name matters, or she does not care. In either case, her response to McEachern demonstrates that the orphanage is far more interested in appearing to have an interest in children's well-being than in actually protecting their rights.












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Common Core-aligned