The cause was that someone started fires
We are always safe in school.We get safe water to wash our hands.We also get many other facilitienice teachers.But schools also face problems.This may be due to accidents.Here are a few problem our school has faced:
Fire accident:Our school has faced a fire problem in 2019.Students who joined by 2018 maximum must have known this problem.Many of the students were scared and many also started to cry.But after a few hours standing in our school ground,we were safe.This may be a major problem,but our school authourity handled with care.
Water scarcity:Our school has faced a water scarcity.We didn't get water to wash our hands. sadly,the lunch break was correctly when the scarcity started.We couldn't wash our hands.But it was alright by the next day.We washed our hands,with the water which was already in the buckets.
Cockroach incident: Cockroaches went throughout our school.This may seem funny,but it was.All our baskets and bags were filled with cockroaches,when we went to watch a general assembly.But,we faced it. (i hate cockroahes after that incident)
Answer:
The bird in the story brings life back to the family after the the family experienced A LOT of bad things.
Explanation:
N AfD election poster in Berlin says "Stop Islamisation"
The nationalist Alternative for Germany (AfD) has grown rapidly since it was formed in 2013 and is now the biggest opposition party in the Bundestag (national parliament), with 89 seats.
Founded in 2013 as an anti-euro party, it has shifted its focus to immigration and Islam and is increasingly seen as far-right in tone.
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Is it far-right?
Yes. It may not have started out as a far-right party but it soon embraced far-right policies and many of its leaders have espoused far-right rhetoric.
AfD co-chairman Alexander Alexander Gauland has talked of fighting an "invasion of foreigners" and the party openly focuses on Islam and migration, seeing Islam as alien to German society. Some of the party's rhetoric has been tinged with Nazi overtones.
The AfD sits in the same political family as France's far-right National Front and Austria's far-right Freedom Party - as well as the populist, anti-Islam Dutch Freedom Party (PVV) of Geert Wilders. Nigel Farage, former leader of the UK's anti-EU party Ukip, took part in their 2017 election campaign.