Asked by doodle bob
Read the passage, then answer the questions that follow.
The arkatis (recruiters) who were hired by shipping companies were Indians themselves; they knew villagers would not want to cross the water. But they also knew where there were hungry, desperate people. So they fanned out to the countryside and began to look for strong men. Bharath, who was about to leave for Trinidad, later explained how that happened. His version of English is hard to understand, but it is how the Indians began to speak on the islands. “E no tell e I go chinedad you know . . . e no tell e no come back, e no greet mumma fadder again.” (“He did not tell me I was going to Trinidad, you know. He didn't tell me I would never come back, or never see my mother and father again.”)
–Sugar Changed the World,
Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos
Which sentence best states the central idea of the passage?
What type of evidence does the passage provide to support the central idea?
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Central idea: Recruiters (arkatis) preyed on poor, desperate Indian villagers and often deceived them into leaving home for distant plantations, without telling them they would never return.
Type of evidence: The passage uses a brief factual summary plus an anecdotal/primary-source quotation (Bharath’s firsthand testimony) to illustrate and support that central idea.
Type of evidence: The passage uses a brief factual summary plus an anecdotal/primary-source quotation (Bharath’s firsthand testimony) to illustrate and support that central idea.
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