Religious toleration is people allowing other people to think or practice other religions and beliefs.
When someone says they’re a theist and believe in something that you may think is absurd or crazy, you take them seriously anyway.
When someone says that they have to observe the Sabbath and will be unavailable, you take them seriously.
When someone politely apologizes that they can’t do something because it’s against their religious beliefs, with no harm to the other person, you accept their apology, realize they don’t mean to hurt you, and move on. (I’m excluding the case where this is being done because of discrimination or nefariousness).
When someone asks to eat in a restaurant that accords with their religion’s dietary laws, and this doesn’t negatively affect you, you go there instead of a different restaurant.
Kashmir is the main reason. (Now Bangladesh)
I think that B , D , & E are too narrow.
Answer:
He faced his adversity head-on and did what was right.
Explanation: The man described in the poem "If We Must Die" was a person who did what was right during his life. He did this by facing all adversity he faced head-on and didn't cower down and stop trying. He did all he could to preserve his dignity throughout his rough times.
In line 13 of the poem it states " “the murderous, cowardly pack” that he stood up too. This shows how he fought against diversity and didn't run from the problem and fought to the death.
In comparison with the poem, Jackie Robinson stood up to racism head on. In paragraph 5, the author discusses the time Mr. Robinson was jailed because he did not agree with and disputed the officers arrest of his black friend.