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Native American History (THE NATIVE PROBLEM (1)
-Discrimination &…
Native American History
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Approximately 100,00 people were obliged to move away from their community and dispossessed of everything they had.
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THE NATIVE PROBLEM
1)
-Discrimination & threats.
-Affair administration to manage Indian affairs.
-Proprietary of the land.
Native American Policy.” George Washington's Mount Vernon, www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/native-american-policy/ text
2)
- After 2000 BC developing states.
- Highly skilled farmers.
-Europe started to colonize America.
-Use of other lands.
- Resistance to colonization.
- New developments=new profits.
-Life of tribes are threatened too.
“An Overview of Native American History.” Scholastic, www.scholastic.com/teachers/articles/teaching-content/history-native-americans/
3)
-American Indian tribes are here.
- Most active peoples in effecting political changes.
-They riabilitate some rights:education,land onwership and the revitalization of traditional culture.
A: Pauls, Elizabeth Prine. “Native American.” Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 19 Jan. 2018, www.britannica.com/topic/Native-American.
4)
- Commemorate Indian tribes: Mayflowers in England (Plymouth).
-Cannupa Hanska Luger is leading an art and historian project.
- images and ideas tells the story of the ship’s passengers presents the Native American perspective on English colonization.
-“It’s important that these stories be told,” he said, “so that future generations aren’t limited by the romantic and mythical experience that I was educated in.”A: Nayeri, Farah. “Native Americans Get a Stronger Voice in the Mayflower Story.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 22 Jan. 2020
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- It was a Choctaw leader that described the journey: "Trail of Tears and Death".
- The first population to be dispossessed and taken away was Choctaw
- The journey the native Americans had to face was really hard, without any supplies and traveled by foot.
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- 1/4 of the 18,000 Indians did during the forced journey, march.
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The trail of tears was the forced relocation during the 1830s of Eastern Woodlands Indians of the Southeast region of the United States (including Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole, among other nations) to Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River.
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President Jackson supported the southern state's efforts to take the Indians' land and make them move.
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100,000 indigenous people were forced from their homes during that period
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