Q1. On what grounds did Mahatma Gandhi make an appeal to Hitler to stop the War?
Q2. Discuss the traditional Christian hostility towards Jews.
Q3. What are some of the sources of our knowledge about the Holocaust?
Q4. Why did Hitler want to conquer Eastern Europe?
Q5. How did the Nazis influence the curriculum at the school level?
Q6. How did the Nazis treat the women in Germany
Answers
Answer:
jfajafkhx cnF da ", $! °<eurajgz faanaf. z sg f sg
Explanation:
nhagjsgm f at g tanat a agtna aggnf btqnat tqbatnaf a atnqtnbattwbwtnwtn at tw tw.btqbarbqD rq qr sf gs f af faf a af ssg dy.ydyddydhgssgzhdhfjxbxbcndjdustdhdhdhf .ssg sg.sgg.gssg. af ga fsg sg sg sf gs sf af sg
Answer:
At 6 o’clock Mussolini.” This cryptic note in his diary of Dec. 12, 1931, is the only record that M. K. Gandhi made of his meeting with Benito Mussolini in Rome.
Gandhi had, since his days as a student in London, come to have deep fondness for the people of Europe, while nurturing deep doubts about the nature of European states. His tenderness for the people was based on the belief that they too—like the people around the world who were enslaved by Europe—were ground under the heel of modern civilization, which was embodied by the rapacious colonial structure that Europe had created and perpetuated. Gandhi could therefore count among his friends and co-workers many women and men from Europe, and he retained a lifelong fondness for the city of London.
Q1 ans-