We appreciate your visit to Please help me with all 6 questions You ll be rewarded 16 points and marked as brainliestParagraph 1 3 in picture since it couldn t. This page offers clear insights and highlights the essential aspects of the topic. Our goal is to provide a helpful and engaging learning experience. Explore the content and find the answers you need!
Please help me with all 6 questions. You'll be rewarded 16 points and marked as brainliest
Paragraph 1-3 in picture since it couldn't fit in text
Continuation
Paragraph 4
The teenager hid from the police in jungle until the rustle of her feet on leaves gave her away, and she suddenly found a torch being shone in her face.
Happily, she had been found by another monk, who invited her to complete her escape with himself and seven others. 'I joined them. We slept during the day and walked at night so we would not be seen. Our first two weeks were in the jungle, where there were tigers and other dangerous animals. 'Then we reached the mountains. We only had a biscuit to eat each day. It was snowing and so cold that one of the monks suffered frostbite and was forced to chop off two fingers. My face went black with cold and ice.'
Paragraph 5
Soname recalled her darkest hour: 'We were climbing up and down, up and down. I became exhausted, paralysed, so I couldn't walk any more. I was in the middle of the mountains. I thought it was my destiny to die this way. Either the animals would come to eat me or I would freeze to death. I wasn't afraid: my mind was blocked, almost numb. My heart was with the Dalai Lama*. I told the monk I couldn't walk any more and he turned back, picked me up and carried me. We found a safe place by a river and spent two days recovering. At the border, the Nepalese police arrested us and locked us in a cell for a night. After they had take all our money and jewellery they let us go in Kathmandu. I couldn't walk because my feet were bleeding and swollen. My foot is still scarred today.
Paragraph 6
In 1997 Soname went to live in France, and afterwards moved to Britain, where she married and settled in Brighton. Her passion is music: she writes songs, many mourning her homeland's plight, performs live and has released two CDs. Soname said: 'I am working very hard here. I get up at 4am and use the time to pray, meditate and practise.'
Paragraph 7
Her mother died, her father, sister and three brothers remain in the Tibetan countryside. For years she was unsure if they were still alive, but six months ago she made contact. 'I had sent letters for years, never knowing if they got them. Then I managed to reach them by phone. I spoke to my sister for four hours. The telephone bill was £700 but it was worth it. They knew I was alive but didn't know anything about me. My heart is still in Tibet, and when it is free I will go back to help in whatever way I can.' Soname has a daughter, the child was abandoned by her fathef whwn she was six months old. Soname could not afford to feed the baby without the support of its father, and had to surrender her to a family friend. Soname succeeded in visiting her daughter for 10 days last June. 'I'm working very hard at the same time as performing to raise enough money to bring my daughter to Britain to be with me.'
Questions
1) What is the difference between a cleaning lady and a leading lady?
2) What hapoened to bring teenage Soname to the mountains where she was lying down to die?
3) Why is her singing at the Royal Opera House in London so impirtant to Soname? (Paragraph 2)
4) Describe some of the dangers and hardships facing Soname in her escape across the mountains. (Paragraph 3-5)
5) What do you think Soname meant when she said, 'My heart was with the Dalai Lama'?
6) What kind of music do Soname write and perform (paragraph 2 and 6)