Answer:
This is TRUE.
Explanation:
Let's take a look at the passage where Hinman speaks of the villagers from Le Chambon:
<em>When we look at the villagers of Le Chambon, </em><u><em>we are not only struck by what they did but also by who they were. We are struck by what good people they were. Their goodness did not seem to stem from any Kantian test of universality or utilitarian calculus of consequences. It came from the heart— from who they were as persons.</em></u>
The villagers he is speaking of were responsible for saving the lives of thousands of Jews when Nazism was terrorizing Europe. When the Nazi soldiers got hold of one man, the villagers surrounded the bus where he was sitting and gave him precious, rationed food. When he returned and tried to give them their gifts back, they wouldn't accept it. <u>Their actions, according to Hinman, had no purpose or gain for themselves. They did what they did simply because they were good people, because they had goodness in their hearts.</u>
Answer:
He remembers how his father provided the food he needed. This is different from the current situation in which he lives because now he is the one who needs to take responsibility for his food.
Explanation:
Salva's family has gone. For this reason, he can no longer count on their care and protection, having to take responsibility for himself, for his food, housing and everything that is necessary for his own survival.
On page 48, he begins to remember how his life was different. That's because he remembers that his father was responsible for feeding him and remembers that his father took sweet mangoes home, which made him very happy.
The poet is actually saying he will come quickly to be beside the person he loves; A
China is the country that is responsible for the largest share of the US exports