Difference between revisions of "Week 9 Questions/Comments-327 11"

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(Petitions of the Cherokee Women’s Council on Removal, 1817, 1818)
(Petitions of the Cherokee Women’s Council on Removal, 1817, 1818)
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Throughout this reading, I was confused as to who "our father, the great president" was? The women address that they've done everything the "Father/president" has asked of them: become farmers, manufacture clothes, etc. Who is the father though? And if it really is the president, why do they call him father? --Aqsa Z.
 
Throughout this reading, I was confused as to who "our father, the great president" was? The women address that they've done everything the "Father/president" has asked of them: become farmers, manufacture clothes, etc. Who is the father though? And if it really is the president, why do they call him father? --Aqsa Z.
  
Hopefully in answering your question (or trying to at least, because it was a bit confusing to me as well) the Cherokee Nation was actually considered a sovereign nation, which also meant they had their own constitution and their own laws. The leader of their nation or tribe was a man named John Ross, who in fact was not 100% Cherokee, but he was considered the "Moses of the Cherokee Nation." He was a representative for the Cherokee people to the United States government and he would basically be considered their President (or father...I think). "There are some white men among us who have been raised in this country from their youth, are connected with us by marriage, and have considerable families, who are very active in encouraging the emigration of our nation" (201. John Ross would have been in this category, as he was white and married to a Cherokee woman.
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Hopefully in answering your question (or trying to at least, because it was a bit confusing to me as well) the Cherokee Nation was actually considered a sovereign nation, which also meant they had their own constitution and their own laws. The leader of their nation or tribe was a man named John Ross, who in fact was not 100% Cherokee, but he was considered the "Moses of the Cherokee Nation." He was a representative for the Cherokee people to the United States government and he would basically be considered their President (or father...I think). "There are some white men among us who have been raised in this country from their youth, are connected with us by marriage, and have considerable families, who are very active in encouraging the emigration of our nation" (201. John Ross would have been in this category, as he was white and married to a Cherokee woman. -- Lindsey S.
  
 
== Sarah Winnemucca, “Life Among the Paiutes,” 1883 ==
 
== Sarah Winnemucca, “Life Among the Paiutes,” 1883 ==

Revision as of 05:29, 28 October 2011