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Impact Of Ww2 On African American Women

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The contributions made by the Native Americans were not limited to males. In the “home front”, the Native American women adopted the community’s manual labor. In fact, for the majority of the 150,000 men and women involved in WWII, this was the first time they had a cause to leave the reservation. Since some Native American women were resistant to leave the reservation, they created local opportunities benefiting the United States— welding machinery, canning food, and sewing uniforms. Others sought out many volunteer organizations outside the community, such as: Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency, Women Army Corps, Army Nurse Corps, Red Cross, and civil defense. Collectively, the American Indian population donated over fifty million dollars in bonds to fund the Red Cross. The devotedness of almost 50% of a collection of people unnoticed in history. …show more content…

The comforting but uneducated conclusion made in "Native Americans in the Military - World War II” is that “many who left the reservation during the war to work in the “white” world found they were accepted into and became a part of the national society.” While it would be grand to claim that oppression on the Native Americans was destroyed after WWII, history and modern times are riddled with the stubborn-narrow mindedness of the “ white” society. Sadly, the ignorant conclusions demonstrated by the author Thomas D. Morgan, the article "The Role of Native American’s During World War II”, and the article “Native Americans in the Military - World War II” poison much of today’s

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