In this video segment, from the PBS documentary Looking for Lincoln<span>, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and historian David Blight examine President Abraham Lincoln’s mixed motivations for issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. They conclude that while Lincoln ultimately recognized the moral righteousness freeing the slaves, his first and primary concern was strategic: it was the best way to rally the North and strike at the heart of the South’s economy. Gates and Blight then join a roundtable discussion of Lincoln scholars debating the legal authority of the Proclamation and its special meaning for African Americans.</span>
1. Member or supporter of a German political party formed by Adolf Hitler
2.
3. A voter having the power to make or change a political constitution.
4. Substances made from wood ashes and used in soap and fertilizers.
5. A mineral used for making plaster of Paris and fertilizer
6. To treat badly to do harm to again and again.
Answer:
by explaining how civil rights activists used images in television, magazines and newspapers to bring attention to their work
by explaining how civil rights activists used images in television, magazines and newspapers to bring attention to their work
Explanation:
Islam spread with the expansion on the Ottoman empire. When they conquer were exposed to this religion and many people converted. They also used trading to spread Islam trough southeast Asia, Africa an many more parts of the world. The first conversions were flexible, s it was easy for people to convert into Islam.