The correct answer is option A. "belief in a supreme being". Traditional African religion had several rituals and practices very different from islam and christianity. However, one aspect that was common in traditional african religion and islam and christianity was the belief in a supreme being, as most African societies believe in a single supreme being (Chukwu, Nyame, Olodumare, Ngai, Roog, etc.)
No I do not think there are any negative consequences due to the way our country has shifted from religion playing a large role in our government to today where religion is controversial when someone from Washington mentions God.
Ida B. Wells responded to the question of race relations by documenting the lynchings taking place in the United States. This was usually done by white mobs who claimed they were lynching blacks because of criminal acts they had done, although Ida B. Wells said this was more due to if there was a sense of competition between African-Americans and White Americans, which the whites did not want to see happen as it threatened their society and the institution of slavery in general.
The term used to refer to a black person
Answer:
The 14 Points were the starting point of would be the United Nations in the future. However, these points did not achieve their proposition, the maintaining of peace.
Explanation:
In 1918, the then President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, made a proposal that intended to resolve the issue definitively. For him, it was more important to seal the peace and avoid another war than to point out the punishments aimed at the losers and the compensations of the winners. In other words, the American president embraced a kind of "peace without winners". This proposition was supported by the 14 Points, which according to this document the nations should no longer enter into diplomatic agreements that are not publicly recognized. In addition, he believed that free navigation and deliberate trade between nations would strengthen the link and international cooperation. With regard to militarism, he believed that military apparatus should be restricted only to what was necessary for the maintenance of national security.