Answer:
India is a country located in Asia, often seen mistakenly seen as a poor country and stereotyped. In reality, it has a great culture and celebrates many holidays to honor everyday things such as Holi, a celebration of colors, or Diwali the celebration of lights. It has a great history and was long ago took over by the British after the Sepoy rebellion when they lost control India ended up divided, two major countries that stand out from that division is mainland India and Pakistan. Today in India the language spoken most commonly is Hindi but others such as Gujarati, Tamil, Punjabi are all used. Most people there are Hindu but Shikisam, Buddhism, and Islam occupy India as well. Amanda should not of assumed India is similar to China. Not only is this not true but this assumption puts all Asian countries together. These are stereotypes that are not true. Her assumption was the equivalent of saying America and Europe are the same we very well know they are not.
Jews were not allowed in the army. 1936. There was no visible public persecution of Jews in Berlin during the Olympics but it continued
Answer:
washington thought it was the safest plan
Explanation:
Washington wanted to remain neutral in the war between France and Britain because the US wanted to support France, but not fight Britain because we were too weak to fight, Another reason why Washington wanted to remain neutral was because his cabinet members such as Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson disagreed
Answer:
According to this excerpt, the Treaty of Versailles failed and was on of the causes of WWII.
Explanation:
It is not said in this excerpt but the Treaty of Versailles put the blame for the war on Germany. It basically limited Germany's military and told Germany they had to take full responsibility of the war and try to fix all the damage. Obviously this upset the people of Germany. It was also there reason why Hitler came to power. He did this by making promises to the people of Germany that he would basically "free" Germany from the Treaty and its harsh rules. So although many thought by making the treaty so harsh on Germany would stop any future wars, it did the opposite.