Ibitisam Barakat is the protagonist in Tasting the Sky. She is a young Palestinian girl who must live through the struggles of the 6 days war and many other conflicts with her family. She meets many people, but many of which she is not friends with anymore, except Alef, her piece of chalk that helps her rebuild her world after it is broken. Ibitisam is a very brave, resourceful, and intelligent girl who finds light in the darkest of circumstances, even though she is a young child.
This story really shows me that no matter what I'm going through, there are people in the world, sometimes even younger than me, that have much bigger problems and I need to get over mine. Hope this helps!
1.) Wise/experience - They have been alive for a long time, they have learned so much, and gone through so much. Deaths, new beginnings, bad and good things and define their life.
2.) Determined - Obviously they are determined to live. It's pretty rare to live that long and be very healthy for more years to come.
Here are some things that they probably did to stay as old as they are.
Positive attitude, exercising, living independently, eating good food, and etc...
Hope I helped.
<u>Answer:</u>
<em>"(the soil)/ Is bare now, nor can feet feel, being shod," </em>- by analysing the line, we deduce that Hopkins means people are out of touch with God because they're out of touch with the earth.
<em>The correct option is Option D. </em>
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<u>Explanation:</u>
Gerard Manley Hopkins’s “God’s Grandeur,” is an exploration of the bond between Nature and God. It is about how the Almighty is infused in everything around us, despite man’s effort to ruin everything. When the sonnet was written, industrial and commercial revolutions were at their peak which put extra pressure on the environment. To express his concern and to cause awareness among others, Hopkins penned down this beautiful realisation.
Answer:
because you are writing, which means that you are doing something literature based.
Explanation:
i believe this has something to do with it.
In 1944 Elie and his family were sent to the <span>Auschwitz concentration </span><span>camp. Elie was only 15 at the time</span>