Read the two excerpts.
"Remembering to Never Forget: Dominican Republic's 'Parsley Massacre ” by Mark Memmott:
The method his soldiers used in 1937 to try to identify those who would be killed was cruelly unique. When confronting someone in the lands along the border with Haiti, they would hold up a sprig of parsley and ask what it was. If the person responded by trilling the "r” in perejil (Spanish for parsley), he would be free to go. Anyone who didn't trill the "r” was thought to be a Haitian Creole speaker—and was likely to be killed.
"A Genetics of Justice” by Julia Alvarez:
My father and mother were once again trapped in a police state. They laid low as best they could. Now that they had four young daughters, they could not take any chances. For a while, that spark which has almost cost my father his life and which he had lighted in my mother seemed to have burnt out. Periodically, Trujillo would demand a tribute, and they would acquiesce. A tax, a dummy vote, a portrait on the wall. To my father and other men in the country, the most humiliating of these tributes was the occasional parade in which women were made to march and turn their heads and acknowledge the great man as they passed the review stand.
Which statements accurately compare the two passages? Select three options.
Each text describes the tributes and taxes that Trujillo demanded.
Each text describes how frightening it was to live under the dictatorship.
Each text presents different information on the same topic.
Each text presents different information from a different point of view.
Each text describes how men and women were treated differently.
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The correct alternative is Memmott illuminates that the fiasco isn't extraordinary today and after that exhibits why it justifies remembering.
Dominican Republic and Haiti are neighbor countries.
Various Haitians search for shelter in their neighbor nation until today, in light of the fact that the Dominican Republic has been extending its economy consistently, giving a bigger number of chances for an unrivaled life than in Haiti.
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