Answer: ¿cual es tu pregunta?
Explanation:
Deverias ser mas especifico
Answer:
The letter was written by Lin Zexu, an important official in the Qing Dynasty, to Queen Victoria of Britain. He wrote in response to the growing opium trade in China. For nearly 300 years, the Chinese had desired nothing from the Europeans but silver.
Explanation:
Answer:
Because of several reasons explained below.
Explanation:
The Articles of Confederation unified the 13 Colonies that fought the American Revolution War. John Dickinson wrote the draft used as the basis of these Articles. The 13 states ratified them and they went into effect in March, 1781.
Among the main weaknesses, we can list some:
Congress did not have the power to tax, so the incomes were little to none.
Court system did not exist.
To approve a law, a majority of 9 out of 13 people was required, making it more difficult.
An unanimous vote was required for Amendments.
Even though every state had its own army, it was difficult for the nation to put together a national army.
Due to this reasons, the Articles failed to create a long-term government.
Answer:
Some truths are too difficult to fathom if one has not experienced them.
Explanation:
In <em>All Rivers Run To The Sea</em>, Elie Weisel talks about the horrors of the Holocaust that discriminated and annihilated millions of Jewish people. The detailed narration of the holocaust and it's outcome has been and still is one of the most famous genocide in the history of humanity.
The given excerpt from the book tells of how one is incapable of understanding the full extend of the sufferings the Jews faced during that period. He seems to suggest that some truths, even though painful and powerful they may be, are too difficult to fathom by anyone who has no experience of it. He rather stated <em>"Let the gas chambers remain closed to prying eyes, and to the imagination"</em>.
Correct answer: B) The population of the newly created Israeli state grew rapidly.
Context/details:
Jewish settlers had been coming into Palestine since the late 1800s. During the years following World War I, that population stream continued to grow.
After World War II ended, the United Nations (UN) adopted a plan for the partition of Palestine that would create a portion of that territory as the state of Israel. Arabs in the region and surrounding Arab nations were not in favor of this. On May 14, 1948, the Jewish leaders in the land proclaimed their independence as a nation, and a war with Arab peoples and nations in the region followed. Israel won that war and established itself as a nation. The new state of Israel was granted membership in the UN in 1949.
In 1950, the Israeli government passed the "Law of Return," which said that "every Jew has the right to come to this country." In their minds, they were returning to the land of their ancestors. Many people of Jewish ancestry did go to become citizens of Israel. At the time that Israel declared its independence in May, 1948, the Israeli population was 806,000. By 1960, a decade after the Law of Return had passed, the population had more than doubled, to 2.2 million. By the end of the 20th century a few decades later, Israel's population grew to nearly 6½ million.