The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
Maschmann described the event held by the Nazis to celebrate Hitler's coming to power in 1933 in the following way.
Maschmann referred to the march of the troops that carried torches. He compared it to a river of fire. He described how soldiers marched ceremoniously, showing impressive discipline, singing songs about war. People heard the songs and saw the march and emotions went higher and higher.
Melita Maschmann was a youngster when he witnessed the parade. He was only had 15 years old and was very impressed with what he saw that night of January 30, 1933.
That date represented the beginning of Adolph Hitler as the leader of Germany. He established a fascist government, raised a powerful army, and created the SS. He persecuted the Jewish people and built concentration camps with gas chambers. He ordered the invasion of Poland in 1939, initiating the hostilities of World War II.
The correct answers should be the will of the people, a signal from USSR leadership toward democracy, and the weakness of the government.
The people from the area wanted to live freely and wanted to connect with the rest of Germany and form an independent democratic German state. There were no anti-west sentiments and the military was not as strong so it's not those two. USSR was leaning towards democracy due to their policies of glasnost and perestroika and many other things, but the USSR government was generally getting weaker and losing power and influence which led to Germans getting even more power to separate and connect with West Germany.
Answer:
Upon his return in 1324, Mūsā I's pious pilgrimage inspired him to commission two enormous mosques in Timbuktu and Gao. He encouraged his subjects' immersion in scholarship, the arts, and the Qurʾān. He intended to abdicate the throne and return to Mecca but died before he was able to do so
Explanation:
West Virginia's leading industry, coal, underwent wrenching changes. In the early stages of the Depression, the industry suffered from a virtual collapse as mining companies failed and unemployment grew, leaving once busy coal camps idle and stranding thousands of miners and their families.