Moslims go mosque to pray and worship god (Allah)...
The promise:
"You shall be the father of a multitude of nations. . . . I will make nations of you, and kings shall come forth from you. And I will establish my covenant between me and you and your descendants after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and to your descendants after you. And I will give to you, and to your descendants after you, the land of your sojournings [short stay], all the land of Canaan."
<h3>Correct answer:</h3><h2>Abraham.</h2><h3>Explanation:</h3>
Abraham in the Bible, the Hebrew ancestor from whom all Jews pursue their relationship (Genesis 11:27–25:10), led by God to start his individual realm for a different country. In Genesis 22 he is directed by God to dedicate his son Isaac as a test of loyalty, a call later dismissed.
The story of the Jewish people starts in Bronze Age eras in the Middle East when God declared a migrant head named Abram that he would be the ancestor of a noble people if he acted as God commanded him.
Answer:
Cottage industries were pushed to the brink of extinction, as mass produced goods were cheaper and faster to produce
Explanation:
that's why it failed but i'm pretty sure its the same .
Answer:
It was Dec. 5, 1941, and Lt. Ted S. Faulkner’s mission would be delicate and dangerous: fly his B-24 Liberator thousands of miles from Pearl Harbor, sneak over Japanese-held islands in the South Pacific, and take photographs — without starting a war or getting shot down.
Tensions between Japan and the United States were at the boiling point. The United States suspected that the Japanese were up to something, but it didn’t know what or where. It looked as if an attack could come in the area of the Philippines. Faulkner’s task was to photograph the Japanese buildup around islands east of there.
“It was a rather delicate mission,” Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall said later. If detected, the flight might be seen as a hostile act. But his caution was misplaced. Even as Faulkner’s plane landed in Hawaii to prepare for the mission, the massive Japanese fleet was already closing in.
The attack on Pearl Harbor: Unforgettable photos of the bombing
The would-be mission is detailed in a new blog post by National Archives senior archivist Greg Bradsher. And on the 77th anniversary of the Dec. 7 attack, it is another illustration of how the United States was unprepared and tragically wrong about where the main enemy blow would fall.
Explanation:
I think the answer is C. hope it helps