ANSWER:
As India celebrates 70 years of independence from the British, there is an alternative lens to view the history of the two nations. A history not solely defined by the Raj, but one that evolved during a period in the mid-eighteenth century before British rule became entrenched. I’d go so far to argue that to fully understand 1947, you have to understand how the British entered India in the 1770s.
Explanation:
Back then, when the future wasn't yet written, there was still a possibility of exchange between cultures. This exchange would not be available when racial stratification and ‘us’ versus ‘them’ polarities became the norm. It was a time of acceptance and rejection, when class, rather than skin colour was often the over-riding factor of difference.
To free themselves from the authority of England. England wouldn't let them practice their own religion, so in the free country ( America) they could worship their religion without persecution :)
The Reformation is a significant event in European history that divided the region's religious sector and gave birth to a new belief system called Protestantism headed by Martin Luther. Luther's schism from the Church influenced the philosophers and theologians at the time to do the same which resulted to the Enlightenment and eventually the scientific revolution.
The Supreme Court decision that ruled that
state governments must respect some first amendment rights is the Bill
of Rights. The First Amendment founded the four liberties: freedom of the
press, freedom of speech, freedom of religion and freedom of assembly. These are
the liberties that an individual or a group of people may obtain.
Answer:
This is not a question next time
I see this it won't be like this