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#2 |
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The last two people in the right could past for native americans or this case Cherokee. However the other people within the picture is very doubtful, but sometimes you never know.
However as far as many these self proclaimed Cherokees among the European american and Afram population, which seems to be numerous, i seriously doubt such claims to to the Cherokee population, which logically don't add up! |
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#3 |
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How can you be proud or claim a culture that you're ignorant of?
Almost all the individuals that I've met claiming to be Cherokee have no knowledge of the Cherokee culture. I've met a Greek who boasted about Greek pride. Then when I mentioned to him about Greek Pagans, he bashed and called them retards. I find that absolutely funny. |
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#4 |
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How can you be proud or claim a culture that you're ignorant of? Also, i am not sure of the education level in Greece in regards in educating the people of their ancient heritage. |
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#6 |
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#8 |
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Strangely, I can go into a native american culture and understand it.... |
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#9 |
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I feel they aren't real claims.
I am mixed of various ethnic groups, but I don't practice their cultures, so I don't claim their cultures or ethnic identity. So, anyone who claims to be part of a culture and does not know the culture truly cannot claim the culture. ---------- Post added 2012-06-12 at 21:46 ---------- However the question is do the Cherokee still practice that shamanism?, what i understand about them they were considered the so called civilize tribe in the past. Since they adopted certain European customs and acquired slaves as well. I read that somewhere, in my American history coarse in College. |
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#10 |
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I have Cherokee ancestry through my mother! I think it's my grandmother that's Cherokee and Hispanic. I don't know what band she is, nor am I affiliated with any tribe. I don't know much about Cherokees. Haha I visited New Echota once
![]() ---------- Post added 2012-06-13 at 00:53 ---------- Don't you have to be a card carrying Cherokee to claim you are? I have a co-worker who tells me she's a direct descendant of Pocahontas... ![]() |
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#11 |
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Don't you have to be a card carrying Cherokee to claim you are? I have a co-worker who tells me she's a direct descendant of Pocahontas... |
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#12 |
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I agree with the spirit of your post. I was recently determined to have some small fraction of Native American ancestry but it means nothing to me as far as identification. I identify more with my colonial ancestors who fought with Native Americans. Frankly speaking, I only identify as American, although I acknowledge my Japanese ancestry because it is recent and I had some cultural influence from a native born Japanese in my childhood and as an adult. Some specs of NA ancestry in my chromosome painting with a hypothesis of its possible origin mean nothing to me, other than to serve as an academic curiosity.
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#13 |
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If she descends from an old Virginia family called the red Bollings, then she is telling you the truth. They descend from Pocahontas' son with John Rolfe whom was born not long before she died. There are lots of red Bollings around today. One of the most famous was Edith Bolling Galt Wilson, Woodrow Wilson's second wife who some feel ran the country after his stroke. |
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#15 |
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#17 |
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