We did not know there were other people besides the Indian until about one hundred winters ago, when some men with white faces came to our country.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Indians are the second largest population in the world, but we're invisible on TV - everything is either black or white.
In my town, and especially in my area, there were people from everywhere: Algerians, Senegalese, French people, Asians, all kinds of immigrants and natives, and everyone circulated.
The history of the white man in India really jumped up and bit me in the neck.
In the John Wayne movies, the Indians were savages that were trying to scalp you. That culture has really suffered because of the stereotype you see in those westerns.
What white woman, however lonely, was ever captive or insulted by me? Yet they say I am a bad Indian.
Indians are numerous in the tropical regions; not so elsewhere.
We were then in a dangerous, helpless situation, exposed daily to perils and death amongst savages and wild beasts, not a white man in the country but ourselves.
This is going to sound weird, but when I was a kid my old man used to tell us that he was a Sioux Indian warrior in his former life. Native American culture was always big in my house - I don't know why.
The Indians, however, could not migrate from one part of the United States to another; neither could they obtain employment as readily as white people, either upon or beyond the Indian reservations.
America has absorbed people from around the world, and there is an Indian in every part of the world. This characterizes both the societies. Indians and Americans have co-existed in their natural temperament.
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