I believe it’s three. I hope this helps.
Answer:
Pretty sure it's A
Explanation:
It's showing how the scrolls were discovered. A boy went into a cave and found them, so that's how they were found. The other answers don't fit the text of the paragraph, so it should be A.
Answer:
Richard Rodriguez is an American writer who became famous for his autobiography called <em>Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez</em><em>. </em>The autobiography especially sheds light on his intellectual development.
Rodriguez was born into a Mexican immigrant family in San Francisco, California. However, he grew up surrounded by a completely different, American, culture. In <em>Hunger of Memory, </em>he tells how being Mexican and a part of a socially disadvantaged family made him feel inferior to other children. However, he realizes and pays close attention to the fact that, despite being different and belonging to another ethnicity, he grew up to be an average American citizen. In this context, he tells that <em>his parents are no longer his parents in a cultural sense</em><em>. </em>His parents grew up in a different country, in different circumstances. The culture they were surrounded by is not the same as the one he grew up with. His education, customs, and values are different from the ones of his parents. That's why he can't and refuses to claim that he has <em>unbroken ties</em> with the Mexican culture.
Answer:
A) From a Jewish survivor's perspective.
Explanation:
In <em>All Rivers Run to the Sea</em>, Elie Wiesel tells us about his own experience under Nazis oppression and gruesome treatment of the Jews. He is a Jew, a writer and a survivor of the Holocaust, so in his work, we can <em>experience </em>the very essence of what was going there. Though his works made him famous, he said that those honors are a burden because he would rather like that his sister Tsiporah stayed alive, that Holocaust did not happen and book left unwritten.
Artie Spiegelman used his father Vladek`s vivid memories for writing <em>Maus. </em>He made hours and hours of interviews which included prewar, war and after war period. Vladek with his first wife Anja were first sent into segregated neighborhoods (ghettos) and then going through several Nazi camps. They tried to escape several times, but always unsuccessfully. In that time they had a young son Richie who they sent to a different ghetto to be with his aunt, but after she found out about sending them to the camp, she pois oned her children, Richie and herself. After the war, Anja was deeply disturbed and she committed sui cide. Vladek continued his life, but haunted by terrible past.