English, asked by mariyaborgam, 3 days ago

Why was the olive tree so important to Sameer? Why was it so important to
Nada? How did they feel when it was destroyed by the storm?​

Answers

Answered by arnabchakraborty14
0

Answer:

"The Olive Tree" is a lovely new book that will encourage children between the ages of four and eight to see how children can learn to be friends even with differences and disagreements. The book also will help children and their parents to explore difficult themes of forgiveness and reconciliation, Elsa Marston, an Indiana-based author of many children's books with Middle Eastern settings wrote the story while Claire Ewart, also based in Indiana, prepared the illustrations.

"The Olive Tree" is a lovely new book that will encourage children between the ages of four and eight to see how children can learn to be friends even with differences and disagreements. The book also will help children and their parents to explore difficult themes of forgiveness and reconciliation, Elsa Marston, an Indiana-based author of many children's books with Middle Eastern settings wrote the story while Claire Ewart, also based in Indiana, prepared the illustrations.The book is set in Lebanon at the end of the long civil war. The conflict is barely mentioned and is referred to only by the term "the trouble". A family who had left their village during the trouble because they were different from their neighbors returns home. Sameer, a young boy, hopes his returning neighbors will have a friend for him to play with. The neighbors, however, are cool and reserved. Their daughter, Muna, shows no interest in befriending Sameer.

"The Olive Tree" is a lovely new book that will encourage children between the ages of four and eight to see how children can learn to be friends even with differences and disagreements. The book also will help children and their parents to explore difficult themes of forgiveness and reconciliation, Elsa Marston, an Indiana-based author of many children's books with Middle Eastern settings wrote the story while Claire Ewart, also based in Indiana, prepared the illustrations.The book is set in Lebanon at the end of the long civil war. The conflict is barely mentioned and is referred to only by the term "the trouble". A family who had left their village during the trouble because they were different from their neighbors returns home. Sameer, a young boy, hopes his returning neighbors will have a friend for him to play with. The neighbors, however, are cool and reserved. Their daughter, Muna, shows no interest in befriending Sameer.Sameer and Muna quarrel when olives from a tree on Muna's side of the wall fall into the yard of Sameer's family. The relationship between the two children becomes icy. Then, when a severe thunderstorm destroys the old olive tree, Sameer and Muna find a way to patch up their disagreements and to become friends.

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