<span>I think the answer is B. The draw between what individuals need to do and what society will enable them to do. A Raisin in the Sun depicts half a month in the life of the Youngers, an African-American family living on the South Side of Chicago in the 1950s. At the point when the play opens, the Youngers are going to get a protection check for $10,000. This cash originates from the perished Mr. More youthful's extra security approach.</span>
2. The whole Nazi environment probably aided to these Sonderkommandos becoming collaborators, from seeing everyone around you either fleed, killed or tortured is enough to make people to make choices like that. It was a live or die situation and under those circumstances, anything could happen.
3. Levi and Langer want us to see this situation from the Sonderkommandos point of view, where virtue and morality don't apply and the only choice is to kill/ follow the Nazi orders or be killed. They probably thought that by taking on this task there was a chance of survival.
4. The choices that we make help us to develope as person and in our personal identity, and in the absence of meaningful choices it can confuse us in our identities, and can lead us to make critical descisions.
Answer:
why was she tired?
where was she Last night?
how many people were there at the party?
what was in the box?
who was in the office?
when were the students absent?
why was she late?
who was at the door?
The mother felt it was the child's fault for everything so the child suffered for it