首页
登录
职称英语
(1)Khalida’s father says she’s 9—or maybe 10. As much as Sayed Shah loves hi
(1)Khalida’s father says she’s 9—or maybe 10. As much as Sayed Shah loves hi
游客
2024-11-06
60
管理
问题
(1)Khalida’s father says she’s 9—or maybe 10. As much as Sayed Shah loves his 10 children, the functionally illiterate Afghan farmer can’t keep track of all their birth dates. Khalida huddles at his side, trying to hide beneath her chador and headscarf. They both know the family can’t keep her much longer. Khalida’s father has spent much of his life raising opium, as men like him have been doing for decades in the stony hillsides of eastern Afghanistan and on the dusty southern plains. It’s the only reliable cash crop most of those farmers ever had. Even so, Shah and his family barely got by: traffickers may prosper, but poor farmers like him only subsist. Now he’s losing far more than money. "I never imagined I’d have to pay for growing opium by giving up my daughter," says Shah.
(2)The family’s heartbreak began when Shah borrowed $2,000 from a local trafficker, promising to repay the loan with 24 kilos of opium at harvest time. Late last spring, just before harvest, a government crop-eradication team appeared at the family’s little plot of land in Laghman province and destroyed Shah’s entire two and a half acres of poppies. Unable to meet his debt, Shah fled with his family to Jalalabad, the capital of neighboring Nangarhar province. The trafficker found them anyway and demanded his opium. So Shah took his case before a tribal council in Laghman and begged for leniency. Instead, the elders unanimously ruled that Shah would have to reimburse the trafficker by giving Khalida to him in marriage. Now the family can only wait for the 45-year-old drug runner to come back for his prize. Khalida wanted to be a teacher someday, but that has become impossible. "It’s my fate," the child says.
(3)Afghans disparagingly call them "loan brides"—daughters given in marriage by fathers who have no other way out of debt. The practice began with the dowry a bridegroom’s family traditionally pays to the bride’s father in tribal Pashtun society. These days the amount ranges from $3,000 or so in poorer places like Laghman and Nangarhar to $8,000 or more in Helmand, Afghanistan’s No. 1 opium-growing province. For a desperate farmer, that bride price can be salvation—but at a cruel cost. Among the Pashtun, debt marriage puts a lasting stain on the honor of the bride and her family. It brings shame on the country, too. President Hamid Karzai recently told the nation: "I call on the people(not to)give their daughters for money; they shouldn’t give them to old men, and they shouldn’t give them in forced marriages."
(4)All the same, local farmers say a man can get killed for failing to repay a loan. No one knows how many debt weddings take place in Afghanistan, where 93 percent of the world’s heroin and other opiates originate. But Afghans say the number of loan brides keeps rising as poppy-eradication efforts push more farmers into default. "This will be our darkest year since 2000," says Baz Mohammad, 65, a white-bearded former opium farmer in Nangarhar. "Even more daughters will be sold this year." The old man lives with the anguish of selling his own 13-year-old daughter in 2000, after Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar banned poppy growing. "Lenders never show any mercy," the old man says. Local farmers say more than one debtor has been bound hand and foot, then locked into a small windowless room with a smoldering fire, slowly choking to death.
(5)Efforts to promote other crops have failed. Wheat or corn brings $250 an acre at best, while poppy growers can expect 10 times that much. Besides, poppies are more dependable: hardier than either wheat or corn and more tolerant of drought and extreme heat and cold. And in a country with practically no government-funded credit for small farmers, opium growers can easily get advances on their crops. The borrower merely agrees to repay the cash with so many kilos of opium, at a price stipulated by the lender— often 40 percent or more below market value. Islam forbids charging interest on a loan, but moneylenders in poppy country elude the ban by packaging the deal as a crop-futures transaction—and never mind mat the rate of return is tantamount to usury. [br] The relationship between the first and second paragraphs is that_____.
选项
A、both present the actions taken by the Afghan government
B、the second is the logical result of the first
C、the second offers me main reason of the first
D、each presents the good side of the Afghan society
答案
C
解析
原文首段讲述了年仅9岁或10岁的Khalida就要不得不被父亲嫁出去,第2段具体讲述了父亲因从毒品贩子那里借贷无法偿还而不得不以女儿还债的经过,故第1段是结果,第2段是原因,正确答案为C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3833061.html
相关试题推荐
(1)Khalida’sfathersaysshe’s9—ormaybe10.AsmuchasSayedShahloveshi
(1)Khalida’sfathersaysshe’s9—ormaybe10.AsmuchasSayedShahloveshi
她父亲决不赞成她嫁给这样一个穷人。Herfatherwillneverapproveofhermarryingsuchapoorman.a
(1)Asachild,IlovedCharlieChaplinfilms.Iwouldputonmyfather’sshoe
(1)Asachild,IlovedCharlieChaplinfilms.Iwouldputonmyfather’sshoe
(1)Asachild,IlovedCharlieChaplinfilms.Iwouldputonmyfather’sshoe
PassageTwo(1)AtaFather’sDaybreakfast,my5-year-oldsonandhis
PassageTwo(1)AtaFather’sDaybreakfast,my5-year-oldsonandhis
PassageTwo(1)AtaFather’sDaybreakfast,my5-year-oldsonandhis
PassageTwo(1)AtaFather’sDaybreakfast,my5-year-oldsonandhis
随机试题
______,theshortisinsomewaysnotreallynew.A、Likemanyanothernewthings
It’struethat"Asmallchangecanmakeabigdifference"inourlife.Abet
Smith教授已接受邀请将给我们做一个关于如何选择自己喜欢的职业的报告。ProfessorSmithhasbeeninvitedtogiveus
【S1】[br]【S9】L动词辨义题[考频:11]。空格处位于shouldbe之后,介词to之前,需要填入动词的被动语态。该句意为:相反,这些资源应该用于
LisaTylerwaswearyafteralong,harddayatthepotteryfactorywhereshe
有“史学之父”称号的是()。A.希罗多德 B.修昔底德 C.孔德 D.比
正常成人妇女乳腺通常不包括的组成内容是A.平滑肌 B.腺叶 C.小叶 D.
试验的次数是人为控制的,通过分析事件的历史数据来确定未来事件发生的概率,这种方法
盐酸在注射剂中用作A.抗氧剂 B.抑菌剂 C.增溶剂 D.渗透压的调节剂
锚杆挡土墙是利用锚杆技术形成的一种挡土结构物。其缺点有()。A.结构重量轻,节约
最新回复
(
0
)