The Indian groups decided to resist their removal by using force and fighting back. They started a few wars.
Ethiopia.
Native Americans resisted the Indian Removal Act through various means, including legal challenges, peaceful protests, and armed resistance. Notably, the Cherokee Nation took their case to the U.S. Supreme Court in Worcester v. Georgia (1832), which affirmed their sovereignty, although the ruling was largely ignored by the government. Other tribes, like the Seminoles in Florida, engaged in armed conflict, leading to the Seminole Wars. Additionally, many Native Americans sought to adapt and negotiate with the U.S. government to protect their lands and way of life.
i know i came here for the answer not to answer it
The Sauk, led by Chief Black Hawk, resisted removal through a series of conflicts known as the Black Hawk War in 1832. They fought against the US Army and militias in an attempt to regain their ancestral lands in Illinois. Despite their initial resistance, the Sauk were eventually defeated and forcibly removed to lands west of the Mississippi River.
They fought back for it was their land they where there first not the Americans 9aka Andrew Jackson and his army)
The Indian groups decided to resist their removal by using force and fighting back. They started a few wars.
By adopting the contemporary culture of white people.
to resist removal they sued the government,wrote a protest letter and jackson ignored this and made them leave!
In the end they were unable to resist removal.
They hid in Florida
Ethiopia.
Native Americans resisted the Indian Removal Act through various means, including legal challenges, peaceful protests, and armed resistance. Notably, the Cherokee Nation took their case to the U.S. Supreme Court in Worcester v. Georgia (1832), which affirmed their sovereignty, although the ruling was largely ignored by the government. Other tribes, like the Seminoles in Florida, engaged in armed conflict, leading to the Seminole Wars. Additionally, many Native Americans sought to adapt and negotiate with the U.S. government to protect their lands and way of life.
i know i came here for the answer not to answer it
The Cherokee, as a tribe, did not resist movement to Oklahoma.
The Sauk, led by Chief Black Hawk, resisted removal through a series of conflicts known as the Black Hawk War in 1832. They fought against the US Army and militias in an attempt to regain their ancestral lands in Illinois. Despite their initial resistance, the Sauk were eventually defeated and forcibly removed to lands west of the Mississippi River.
The maroons fought against the Europeans due to a desire for freedom and to resist enslavement. They also fought to protect themselves and their communities from further exploitation and mistreatment by colonial powers.