The attack on Pearl Harbor by kamikaze pilots in December of 1941. The treatment of Prisoners of War during World War II by the Axis powers. The dropping of the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima in August of 1945. The consequences of Japanese internment camps in the United States.

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Question: Which of the following provides historical context for the above source?
Your answer:
The attack on Pearl Harbor by kamikaze pilots in December of 1941.
O The treatment of Prisoners of War during World War II by the Axis powers.
O The dropping of the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima in August of 1945.
The consequences of Japanese internment camps in the United States.
Transcribed Image Text:Question: Which of the following provides historical context for the above source? Your answer: The attack on Pearl Harbor by kamikaze pilots in December of 1941. O The treatment of Prisoners of War during World War II by the Axis powers. O The dropping of the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima in August of 1945. The consequences of Japanese internment camps in the United States.
Eiko Taoka, then 21, was on board a streetcar that had left Hiroshima Station and was 750 m from ground zero, when the bomb fell. At 8:15, an intense flash and blast engulfed the car, instantly setting it on
fire.
"When we were near.. Hatchobori and since I had been holding my son in my arms, the young woman in front of me said, 1 will be getting off here. Please take this seat.' We were just changing places
when there was a strange smell and sound. It suddenly became dark and before I knew it, I had jumped outside. I held (my son] firmly and looked down on him. He had been standing by the window and
I think fragments of glass had pierced his head. His face was a mess because of the blood flowing from his head. But he looked at my face and smiled. His smile has remained glued in my memory. He did
not comprehend what had happened. And so he looked at me and smiled at my face which was all bloody. I had plenty of milk which he drank all throughout that day. I think my child sucked the poison
right out of my body. And soon after that he died. Yes, I think that he died for me."
Transcribed Image Text:Eiko Taoka, then 21, was on board a streetcar that had left Hiroshima Station and was 750 m from ground zero, when the bomb fell. At 8:15, an intense flash and blast engulfed the car, instantly setting it on fire. "When we were near.. Hatchobori and since I had been holding my son in my arms, the young woman in front of me said, 1 will be getting off here. Please take this seat.' We were just changing places when there was a strange smell and sound. It suddenly became dark and before I knew it, I had jumped outside. I held (my son] firmly and looked down on him. He had been standing by the window and I think fragments of glass had pierced his head. His face was a mess because of the blood flowing from his head. But he looked at my face and smiled. His smile has remained glued in my memory. He did not comprehend what had happened. And so he looked at me and smiled at my face which was all bloody. I had plenty of milk which he drank all throughout that day. I think my child sucked the poison right out of my body. And soon after that he died. Yes, I think that he died for me."
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