They didn't really celebrate holidays they had festivals and fairs.
their own special holidays and some good ol holidays we celebrate even today
Just about everything...except, perhaps, celebrate Thanksgiving.
same thing as you survive, go to work,and raise families
The Cherokee Indians, or commonly known as Buelshetoes are taught now in Reservation Schools. These schools are usually headed by the tribes chieftain and one political figure in the state of reservation.
they celebrate some good holidays that we celebrate today in America
You mean what ARE the social classes of the Cherokee? They still exist, you know. The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, one of three federally recognized Cherokee tribes, lives closer to the old way than most other native tribes today. Their website might be a good starting point for you, try the links below.
The same way everyone else in the 21st century earns a living: WORKING A JOB.
Yes and no. Certainly today there are Cherokee living there, and there have been in the past. By the time of the treaty period with European immigrants there were no official tribes living in the boundaries of Florida.
why do we celebrate bonfire night today
they ate all kinds of berries like the ones you eat today. so they ate raspberries, blueberries and so on.
Almost all holidays we celebrate today are Pagan based. Easter is based on the pagan holiday Eostre or Ostara. These holidays are pagan fertility holidays. The eggs and "Easter bunny" of the Christian Easter come from the pagan use of them as fertility symbols.
One of the first was created by Sequoyah, the leader of the Cherokee nation. It contained 85 characters, representing the syllables of the Cherokee language. It was used as far back as 1828, in the "Cherokee Phoenix," the first newspaper published by what were then called Indians (and today are called Native Americans). The newspaper was bilingual-- English and Cherokee. I enclose a link to some information about it, which includes images of what written Cherokee looked like.