The correct answer is parentheses.
When you are quoting somebody's words, first you are going to use the quotation marks ("), then cite the quotation, write a period, and close the quotation with the marks again. In order to avoid plagiarism, you have to cite your sources. This means that you need to use the parentheses, where you are going to write where you took that citation from.
For example:
<em>What characterizes romantic poetry is the "spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" (Wordsworth 263).</em>
As you can see, the source (Wordsworth) is written in the parentheses, along with the page number.
I am assuming that this question is asking you to correct this sentence. Here is the revised sentence: "You forgot that you took my blanket too."
Answer:
Because it maintains the religious concepts of Judaism and encourages people not to lose faith in God.
Explanation:
This question is about the book "Night" where the narrator tells how his life was in the Nazi concentration camp, as a Jew, suffering the most diverse and inhuman abuse that can be imagined. In that same concentration camp there is a rabbi named Eliahou, who maintains religious concepts, urging everyone not to lose faith in God. The narrator does not know how the rabbi did not provoke anyone's anger because it was not possible to see God in a situation like the one they were going through, but people were comforted by the rabbi's words.