Answer:
C. Held their own service in secret
Explanation:
In 1952, American ally General Fulgencio Batista led a coup against President Carlos Prio and forced Prio into exile in Miami, Florida. Prio's exile inspired the creation of the 26th of July Movement against Batista by Castro. The movement successfully completed the Cuban Revolution in December 1958. Castro nationalized American businesses—including banks, oil refineries, and sugar and coffee plantations—then severed Cuba's formerly close relations with the United States and reached out to its Cold War rival, the Soviet Union. In response, U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower allocated $13.1 million to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in March 1960, for use against Castro. With the aid of Cuban counter-revolutionaries, the CIA proceeded to organize an invasion operation.
After Castro's victory, Cuban exiles who had traveled to the U.S. had formed the counter-revolutionary military unit Brigade 2506. The brigade fronted the armed wing of the Democratic Revolutionary Front (DRF), and its purpose was to overthrow Castro's government. The CIA funded the brigade, which also included some U.S. military[7] personnel, and trained the unit in Guatemala.
Over 1,400 paramilitaries, divided into five infantry battalions and one paratrooper battalion, assembled and launched from Guatemala and Nicaragua by boat on 17 April 1961. Two days earlier, eight CIA-supplied B-26 bombers had attacked Cuban airfields and then returned to the U.S. On the night of 17 April, the main invasion force landed on the beach at Playa Girón in the Bay of Pigs, where it overwhelmed a local revolutionary militia. Initially, José Ramón Fernández led the Cuban Army counter-offensive; later, Castro took personal control. As the invaders lost the strategic initiative, the international community found out about the invasion, and U.S. President John F. Kennedy decided to withhold further air support.[8] The plan devised during Eisenhower's presidency had required involvement of both air and naval forces. Without air support, the invasion was being conducted with fewer forces than the CIA had deemed necessary. The invaders surrendered on 20 April. Most of the invading counter-revolutionary troops were publicly interrogated and put into Cuban prisons. The invading force had been defeated within three days by the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces (Spanish: Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias – FAR).
1. Monks were men and nuns were women who cut ties with regular life and dedicated themselves to religion.
2. Monks and nuns did not live in the town or city with the other villagers, instead they lived in their own self-sufficient communities in order to focus all of their attention on their religious studies and activities.
3. Monks and nuns did not visit the regular towns and simply kept to their own community.
4. Monks lived in communities called monasteries. You choose
The correct answer is knowing the ways that humans use Earth's natural resources.
The ancient settlers of the Andean region, at the foot of the Andes Mountains developed extraordinary irrigation and cultivation systems on the hillsides. The crops were deployed in the form of steps on the hillside making productive all the resources provided by nature and adding technology for its efficient and effective use.
The current farmers use some of the techniques and customs inherited from the original peoples and add the most modern technologies to further increase the productivity of the lands and contribute positively to the economy of their regions.
It is a common feature in the diverse cultures of humanity to adapt to the geographical characteristics of the region where they live solving the difficulties through ingenuity and hard work.