NO
If none of your other great grandparents had any Native American ancestry, then you are 1/8 Native American according to this very imprecise means of assigning fractional heritage, because one out of your eight great grandparents were Native Americans.
It's played in Germany, but that doesn't make it a German sport. It's a Native Indian sport, originated in Canada. lacrosse is a native American sport
To make them accept white culture by cutting ties with their own culture.
they did not
to make them accept white culture by cuttling ties with their own culture
to remove Indian culture from Indian children
Because American settlers moved in native Americans territories.
According to Red Wolf, a native American, "MORE THAN 20 MILLION PEOPLE IN THE UNITED STATES ARE OF NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN MIXED BLOOD. IF YOU HAVE ONE DROP OF INDIAN BLOOD, YOU ARE INDIAN. WALK THE INDIAN PATH AS YOUR HEART FEELS". Don't forget all the Indians in Asian India. Whether you are a member of a particular ethnic group if you have one parent from that group, one grandparent, one great-grandparent, or "one drop of blood" (an obsolete and racist way of saying "any ancestry no matter how small") is a matter of how you and the culture you live in looks at things. There is no universal agreement on this point. In the days of American segregation, having a great-great-grandparent who was black would make you black - as long as your skin was also dark. The Nazis held that anyone was Jewish if they had one grandparent who was Jewish. Advocates for Native Americans, who want to preserve Native identity in the face of widespread intermarriage with descendants of Europeans over the centuries, will say that anyone with any native ancestry is a native American - thus leaving it to the individual to discover and assert that connection. On the other hand, US government criteria for recognizing a Native American for purposes of receiving government benefits is more restrictive.
Because American settlers moved in native Americans territories.
Because American settlers moved in native Americans territories.
You can contact archaeologists, anthropologists, or experts in Native American history to inquire about possible Native American hieroglyphics. Local historical societies, museums, or universities with relevant departments or programs may be a good place to start your inquiry.
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