Answer: The children’s host in Chesham still cared about them after they left.
Explanation:
The passage is derived from the "Children of the Wartime Evacuation” and refers to a story about siblings, Sheila Shear and her sister who were evacuated during the Second World War to Cheshem and placed in the care of Harry Mayo.
Even though he was Christian and they were Jewish, he cared for them so deeply that they kept visiting after the war and Sheila and her mother even attended his funeral.
Perhaps the most evidence of his care was by his own admission when, after his death, his lawyer sent the siblings a cheque with a note saying, "A very small token of my very GREAT AFFECTION."
Answer:
He uses the persuasive language of television commercials to promote awareness of environmental concerns.
Explanation:
Answer:
The main goal for Eli Wiesel's "danger of indifference" is to motivate people to do something when they see other people suffering.
Explanation:
Since Eli Wiesel was a victim of the tragedy known as the Holocaust, he talks about indifference with her own situation and what results from it. Eli shares some examples of people who knew what happened and did nothing at all to help. His goal is to prevent the next generation to be indifferent, since he knows what it cost him and many others that the past one was.