Answer:
To "bear witness" the living can prevent the tragic story of the ghost boys from being repeated with living children and this can contribute to a better world.
Explanation:
This question is about "Ghost Boys" a book written by Jewell Parker Rhodes that tells the story of Jerome, a twelve-year-old boy who was killed when a police officer shot him when he mistook Jerome's toy for a real gun. Jerome became a ghost and saw all the suffering that his family went through with his death. Thus, he decided to form a group with other ghost boys and show some living people the tragic stories that caused their death. This is because only these humans can develop real changes in the world, helping other children not to go through the same injustices that they did and preventing more families from suffering.
The correct answer is <em>Malala was right about the edict and what it meant</em> AND<em> She was a global symbol of girls’ rights but also just a kid.</em>
I believe they should take art so when we are older and we are asked to draw or paint something we can.Also art is a fun activity and it is brain growth.
Answer:
"The Wedding Gift" by Marlen Suyapa Bodden revolves around the life of a woman named Clarissa and her 'wedding gift' slave from her father. And one of the main themes in this story is that of slavery and how discriminatory or inferior the slaves were treated in the South parts of America.
Explanation:
Marlen Suyapa Bodden's "The Wedding Gift," tells the story of how a woman named Clarissa and her 'wedding gift slave "Sarah" who turned out to be her half-sister, a product of their father's secret sexual affair with his slave Emmeline. This story delves into the issue of slavery in the American South, the positions of slaves and their hardships and the issue of class/ belonging among different races, and also especially on the 'inferiority' of the female gender compared to the males.
<u>One dominant issue in the story is that of slavery</u>. This is seen in the lives, the different lives of the two sisters Clarissa and Sarah. While Clarissa, as a white woman, is an accepted daughter of Allen and have full access to her father's world, Sarah, on the other hand, is just a small slave girl who is passed on like a piece of property. She was given by Allen to Clarissa as a wedding gift, and when her husband divorced her, she remained a part of Clarissa's 'belongings' that she takes along with her wherever her life leads.