Churchill's matter-of-fact delivery makes it seem as though he is disinterested in the subject <span />
In 1963, when Martin Luther King<span> Jr. delivered what is now known as </span>his<span> “</span>I Have a Dream<span>” </span>speech<span> on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, he began not with utopian images of racial harmony — children holding hands, black and white breaking bread together — but with the </span>metaphor<span> of a bad check.</span>
"Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, Rage against the dying of the light." Dylan Thomas. what's the question exactly?
incorrect
she can't be something that is describing a feeling
Answer:
The suffering and the emotional cost of the Holocaust must be remembered.
Explanation:
In the given passage from Ronald Reagan's "Speech to Holocaust Survivors", he expressed the importance of remembering the <em>"immeasurable pain of the Holocaust"</em>. He stressed that <em>"its significance is not lost on this generation or any future generation".</em>
Despite the event long gone in the past, <em>"now a dry scar"</em> on the minds and memories of people, it must not be forgotten. He also expresses his belief that <em>"[acting as] the vessel of remembrance"</em> of the Holocaust victims would be a <em>"reunion"</em> of the past and the present, the dead and the living.
Thus, the correct answer is the first option.