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                                                                                          Passage 1

        Hidden Valley looks a lot like the dozens of other camps that dot the woods of central Maine. There’s a lake, some soccer fields and horses. But the campers make the difference. They’re all American parents who have adopted kids from China. They’re at Hidden Valley to find bridges from their children’s old worlds to the new. Diana Becker watches her 3-year-old daughter Mika dance to a Chinese version of “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star.” “Her soul is Chinese,” she says, “but really she’s growing up American.”

       Hidden Valley and a handful of other “culture camps” serving families with children from overseas reflect the huge rise in the number of foreign adoptions, from 7,093 in 1990 to 15,774 last year. Most children come from Russia (4,491 last year) and China (4,206) but there are also thousands of others adopted annually from South America, Asia and Eastern Europe. After cutting through what can be miles of red tape, parents often come home to find a new predicament. “At first you think, ‘I need a child’,” says Sandy Lachter of Washington, D.C., who with her husband, Steve, adopted Amelia, 5, from China in 1995. “Then you think, ‘What does the child need?’ ”

       The culture camps give families a place to find answers to those kinds of questions. Most grew out of local support groups; Hidden Valley was started last year by the Boston chapter of Families with Children from China, which includes 650 families. While parents address weighty issues like how to raise kids in a mixed-race family, their children just have fun riding horses, singing Chinese songs or making scallion pancakes. “My philosophy of camping is that they could be doing anything, as long as they see other Chinese kids with white parents,” says the director, Peter Kassen, whose adopted daughters Hope and Lily are 6 and 4.

       The camp is a continuation of language and dance classes many of the kids attend during the year. “When we rented out a theater for ‘Mulan,’ it was packed,” says Stephen Chen of Boston, whose adopted daughter Lindsay is 4. Classes in Chinese language, art and calligraphy are taught by experts, like Renne Lu of the Greater Boston Chinese Cultural Center. “Our mission is to preserve the heritage,” Lu says.

Kids who are veteran campers say the experience helps them understand their complex heritage. Sixteen-year-old Alex was born in India and adopted by Kathy and David Brinton of Boulder, Colo., when he was 7, “I went through a stage where I hated India, hated everything about it,” he says. “You just couldn’t mention India to me.” But after six sessions at the East India Colorado Heritage Camp, held at Snow Mountain Ranch in Estes Park, Colo., he hopes to travel to India after he graduates from high school next year.

What can be inferred about Alex from the last paragraph?

A

The culture camps caused Alex to hate everything about India.

B

The East India Colorado Heritage Camp led to Alex’s immigration.

C

 Hidden Valley served as a link between Alex’s old world and the new.

D

The culture camps helped Alex better understand his mixed-race family.

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答案:

D

解析:

【喵呜刷题小喵解析】:根据文章最后一段的描述,Alex 出生在印度,被一对美国夫妇收养,一开始对印度非常反感,甚至不能提及印度。然而,在参加了几次文化营活动后,他开始希望毕业后能够去印度旅行。因此,可以推断出文化营活动帮助Alex更好地了解了自己的文化背景和身份,选项D“文化营帮助Alex更好地理解他的混血家庭”符合文意。选项A“文化营让Alex讨厌印度的一切”与文意不符,选项B“东印度科罗拉多遗产营导致Alex移民”在文中没有提及,选项C“Hidden Valley成为Alex新旧世界的桥梁”与文意不符。
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