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Sedaia [141]
4 years ago
6

The kush were influenced culturally by the Egyptians in what way

History
2 answers:
Lisa [10]4 years ago
8 0

The kush was inlfuenced culturally by the Egyptians in th way they worshiped cats


galina1969 [7]4 years ago
6 0

The kush were influenced culturally by the Egyptians in a way that government, culture, and religion were similar.  Like the Egyptians, the Kush*ts built pyramids at burial sites, worshiped Egyptian gods, and mummified the dead.

The Kingdom of Kush constituted an ancient civilization in Africa also known  as Nubia which protracted for over 1400 years.  and had close connections to Ancient Egypt.  It was located in Northeast Africa, in the south of Ancient Egypt.

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With India on its way to independence from British rule and on its way to establishing a constitution, many Muslims were afraid that Hindus would use their majority status to impose upon them laws that would deny them the freedom to pursue their way of life untainted by Hindu ways.

In the 1930s the leader of India's Congress Party, Jawaharlal Nehru, had wanted Muslims to join his party. The Congress Party won the elections that took place at the end of 1945. Nehru considered his party as representing the interests of Hindus and Muslims. but there was the Muslim League, which considered itself as representing Muslims. The Muslim League won all Muslim constituencies and 30 of the 102 seats in parliament.

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How to give sovereignty to Muslims living in communities scattered across the sub-continent was a problem, and in the Punjab, where the Muslims were a majority, there was the problem of Hindu minorities. Muslims, moreover, wanted a place for themselves called pak-i-stan, pak meaning purity, stan meaning place. In rallying Muslim support for his political party, Muhammad Ali Jinnah claimed that Muslims could not progress in their various spheres of life without pakistan. It was impossible, he claimed, "to live under Congress authority on account of acts of injustices." Muslims, he warned, would be "reduced to the status of Shudras [low castes]." He added that he would "never allow Muslims to be slaves of Hindus." Jinnah said that he wanted the Muslims of India to develop to the fullest of  "our spiritual, cultural and economic life in consonance with our own ideals, and according to the genius of our own people."

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