The Iroquois Constitution
In the passage The Iroquois Constitution it is obvious that historical dilemmas would occur throughout the story and it talks about how this tribe was able to overcome it. In the passages that we read before it showed the Natives as being some sort of salvages or people who like to stir up trouble. Some may say that they had a very derogatory mood or way of living as well. When we look over this passage we see that the natives could have became pretty flagrant towards the viewing on their people, but we must also keep in mind that each tribe has their own beliefs and their own rituals. The Iroquois are people of both religious backgrounds and also known for the keeping of the peace amongst their land and those to the surrounding
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Human history talks about how people were so stereotypical and how they had to eat raw corn and how they exchanged grains of food to either make peace amongst each other or for just common trade. They also embroiled about the mistreatment of the women in those days of the many tribes around the world showing that those who mistreated the women did it with so much injustice and weren’t punish themselves for such cruel thing to do to women. The Iroquois tribe did indeed think differently in the whole mistreatment business they believed that women had equal say, power to the men of the tribe and that they shouldn’t be treated as if they were in the appearance of invisibility . They were also said to have been indigenous people at that time of year because if you really think about all the Native tribes in the history of the world they characterize them as indigenous. Along with most of the world the Natives also did have a leader that would say what goes and do what’s best for his people. The Iroquois people had the exact same fundamental aspects of today’s society the same ideas and