<h2>Answer </h2>
3 Still not free
<h2>Explanation </h2>
The phrase <em>still not free</em> is referring back to the word <em>captivity</em> telling us that captivity is the opposite of being free; telling us that the negro is still encage in a cage of oppression and discrimination.
We can rule out option 1 because <em>joyous daybreak </em>has a positive connotation, whereas <em>captivity </em>has a negative one.
We can rule out option 2 because <em>one hundred years </em>is just pointing out a period time not the circumstances of it.
We can rule out option 3 because <em>sadly crippled</em> is telling us how the negro is not where it is.
We can conclude that phrase from the text provides the best context clue to determine the meaning of "captivity" is still not free.
I said that It is D: takes
I think the theme is the cruelty and sometimes the inmorality of racist acts and activism .Growing up in this Apartheid era affected the author in such a way that she used The light of Ghandi´s lamp to express how unfair this world was with black people and continues to be. Being equal, having equal rights or seeking to have them should not be a reason to be put in jail.The girl´s sister is arrested because she is part of an anti- apartheid group and she participated in protests. At first she thinks it is wrong to have the intention to overthrow a government but then understands , with her sister in prison, that the only thing people are fighting for is equal rights.
The purse was passed down generations, it was finally stolen. A man by the name of Mr.PursestealerMcGee stole it. The purse was found in an abandoned temple by the name of Temple of Pursekeeping.