Answer:
1.Where were they moving from? They were moving from rural area to urban areas.
2. Why did they flock to the big cities? They were moving to big cities in search of better paying jobs in the large factories.
Explanation:
Two biggest industrial revolutions have been seen in the history of the US.
The first wave was seen from 1700 to early 1800. This wave brought a rise in the factories.
The second wave was seen after the civil war. This wave bought rise in novel technologies such as telephones, vehicles, etc.
A large number of people migrated to the cities during these industrial revolutions in search of a better life.
Muslim Arabs are about 80 or 90 percent of the Arab population. Although Islamic, there are different sects like Shia, Alawi, Zaidi, and Sunni. Ten percent of Arabs are considered Christian or Druze.
Arabs and Islam are traced back in history. In the seventh century, Arabs received the Islam teachings of Mohammed and Islam spread to Southwest and Central Asia, North Africa, Persia, and Afghanistan, and Central Asia,
Other cultures were influenced when the Arabs invaded territories that believed in other religious teachings like Christian, Jewish, and Zoroastrian
Muslim Arabs invaded territories to create empires, like Umayyid dynasty that was established in 661, in Damascus in 661.
Arab rulers brought took Jews, Christians, Greeks, Persians thinkers to Baghdad to teach during the ʿAbbāsid dynasty. Some of them translated Plato and Aristotle’s literature into Arabic.
hope this helps
Communism be most closely associated with this statement.
c. communism
<u>Explanation:</u>
Basically, communism is the possibility that everybody in a given society gets equivalent portions of the advantages from work. In this given statement Apostle Paul says “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond [slave] nor free, there is neither male nor female: for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” represents communism which rejects any religion and in a true Communist state religion is effectively abolished. The beliefs of communism most famously expressed the idea that inequality and suffering result from capitalism.
None of them happened in the 20th century