Answer:
a process that creates growth, or progress.
Answer:
Baba's definition of sin means that there is no greater sin than taking the right of someone from attaining what he wants and needs.
I agree with Baba's concept of sin, for it robs everyone of the primary right to anything.
Amir finds it hard to accept Baba's opinion of "theft" as the master of all sins for he feels that he had deprived his family of his mother. He felt responsible for stealing her life from them.
Explanation:
In the novel <em>The Kite Runner</em> by Khaled Hosseini, the author deals with the life around the Afghan town of Kabul and his own earlier life growing up in these areas. The story revolves around the themes of identity, the love, loyalty, betrayal and eventual redemption of the characters.
In the given excerpt, Baba is talking about the sin of "theft" which can signify numerous other sins. To him, theft is the most dangerous sin of all, for it robs someone of the essential right. His meaning is clear when he further explains, stating that
<em>Every other sin is a variation of theft... When you kill a man, you steal a life.You steal his wife's right to a husband, rob his children of a father. When you tell a lie, you steal someone's right to the truth. When you cheat, you steal the right to fairness. There is no act more wretched than stealing.</em>
I agree with Baba's concept of sin for it is the major thing that deprives a person from his own right to anything.
Amir asked Baba about what signifies sin, finding it hard to understand when his teachers told him that drinking is a sin. He asked Baba why he drinks a lot which is deemed a sin. But when Baba told him about the only sin that is superior over all, he struggled to understand Baba's concept of sin, for when Baba explains it, he felt bad for 'killing' his mother, thus taking her away from Baba.
Railroads would bring lots of people to stockyards.
This question really needs to be answered separately for different European countries that became right-wing dictatorships between 1918 and 1939.
A few general points. Fascist (I will use the term loosely, strictly speaking it is specific to Italy: Germany was Nazi) ideas drew on developments in nineteenth century thought that stressed the importance of nationalism, developed ideas of inherited intelligence and interpreted the new science of genetics, and of evolution, in racist ways. To go into detail about this you would have to consider the work of philsophers like Hegel and Nietsche (neither were fascists, but their ideas influenced fascism) and of nineteent centruy scientists in foelds such as archaeology and philology (study of the origins of language).
The chaos caused by the First World War undoubtedly helped people look for new political systems. On the one hand the looked to communism, and fascism was a reaction to this by people who believed that human society was inevitably hierarchically structured. The needs for an alternative to communism made it attractive for financiers and industrialists to give fascists essential right-wing support. In Germany, willingness of right-wing parties, including the Nazis, to repudiate Versailles, and hence to rearm, was a major factor. However, the rise of Fascism cannot be ex[plained entirely in relation to the First World War because of the rise to power of Franco in Spain, which had been neutral (although it had been humiliated by the loss of its colonies in war between Spain and the United States in 1898).
The chronic economic depression of the years 1918 - 1940, and in particular of the great slump following 1929, appeared largely due the free market cultivated by liberal democracies, specifically the United States and United Kingdom, between the wars. However, an expanation along these lines needs to take into account that the Weimar republic of 1920s Germany was to a considerable extent run on democratic socialist principles as the Social Democrats were the largest party in the coalition governments. One might also ask why Thatcher's destruction of the UK economy between 1979 and 1983, when unemployment rose to 3 million, did not lead to similar political extremeism.
Issues relating to ideology, economics and the legacy of past conflicts are clearly important in explaining the rise of fascism. However, a short anwer is likely to be oversimplistic about them This is very dangerous. In recent years, politicians have got away with some very undesirable totalitarian policies. One reason is that if prewar precedents are pointed out the objector is too often criticised and ignored for labelling people as "fascist" instead of being listened to serious