Answer:
"Build up . . . institutions which will ensure justice”
“end poverty and ignorance and disease”
Explanation:
edge
Yes, I believe she would be welcoming. Even though the last part of the poem sounds like a curse ("<span>May the young man be sad-minded with hard heart-thoughts"), it is still a statement of the speaker's enduring love for him. She suffers, but imagines that he suffers too, in the exile or wherever he is, and remembers their happy days with sorrow. Her depression has elements of embitteredness, but her love for him is not disputable.</span>
Answer:
A.) Narrate the story.
Explanation:
The speech bubbles as seen in the illustration, were used to narrate what transpired around the 1990s. The women of Iran were greatly restricted by the government and every action of theirs were perceived as rebellion. This was the aftermath of series of protests that were done before this time.
The restriction to freedom was so much that the women no longer had the freewill to make their own independent decisions or reason on matters as free people. All the descriptions of the situation took a narrative form.