Frederick Douglass would act on behalf of oppressed groups and repudiate attempts to fight, infringe, and harm them.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- Frederick Douglass was a former slave and advocate for the freedom of black people.
- Having lived like a slave, he knows what it is to be oppressed and to suffer abuse and violence at the hands of social groups that think they are superior.
- This experience made Douglass react in favor of any social group that went through situations of oppression and violence.
Therefore, we can conclude that he would react in favor of the oppressed groups presented in the two texts indicated in the question, while at the same time repudiating contrary and violent positions in relation to these groups.
You have not provided the quote and texts this question refers to. This prevents me from providing a specific answer, but I hope the information above will help you.
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Answer:
I think it is true but wait and the others
Explanation:
Religion has played an outsized role in U.S. history and politics, but it's one that has often gone unrecognized in U.S. museums.
"As a focused subject area, it's been neglected," says Peter Manseau, a scholar and writer installed last year as the first full-time religion curator at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History.
America's exceptional commitment to religious freedom stems from the diversity of its faith traditions. The rebellious attitudes prevalent in frontier settlements fostered the growth of evangelical movements. African slaves introduced Islam to America. The drive to abolish slavery was led largely by Christian preachers
Answer:
It was supposedly to "retake the Holy Land"