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review the sixth paragraph. manzanar: a site of conscience 1 on sunday,…

Question

review the sixth paragraph.
manzanar: a site of conscience
1 on sunday, december 7, 1941, mary tsukamoto abruptly stopped practicing the piano for her churchs upcoming christmas program when she heard the news: japan had attacked pearl harbor, the u.s. naval base in hawaii. \the whole world turned dark,\ she recalled. at the same time, tom kawaguchi left a public library in san francisco. on the way home, tom feared that bystanders were
eady to pounce\ on him. in the days that followed, all people of japanese ancestry living in the u.s. came under suspicion. many politicians, military leaders, and ordinary citizens believed that japanese americans would side with their country of ancestry, japan, rather than their country of birth, america. mary tsukamoto and tom kawaguchi were just
which of the following would be most relevant to add to the sixth paragraph?
a quote from a japanese american person who was born during world war ii
a quote from someone who witnessed the attack on pearl harbor
a quote from a current employee at the manzanar national historic site
a quote from someone who gave a testimony for the commission

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The sixth paragraph (first given paragraph) is about the experiences of Japanese Americans after Pearl Harbor, including suspicion and perceived loyalty issues. A quote from a Japanese American born during WWII would relate to the generational impact and experiences of Japanese Americans in that era, aligning with the paragraph's focus. A Pearl Harbor witness quote is about the attack itself, not Japanese American experiences. A current employee's quote is about the present, not the WWII era. A testimony for a commission is too vague; the Japanese American born in WWII directly connects to the group (Japanese Americans) discussed in the paragraph.

Answer:

a quote from a Japanese American person who was born during World War II