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Transnational teams e book

by Messaoui Raja, Karim, Ilkay, Meryem, Suna, Fatma, Cemil and Diana

Pages 2 and 3 of 112

Mirror Mirror on the wall

how could we hear them all

transnational teams

Group age 14-17

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conflict cases
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PART 1: THE HISTORIAN
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“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
(George Santayana)


In this book you'll learn about several shameful ethnic conflicts that were witnessed by our ancestors, on long forgotten past times or in more recent painfully remembered days. On recovering them from the trunk of human memory we aim to remember the past, so that we may grow wiser enough to escape our sentence... We firmly believe we're able to learn, we surely want to learn and do better!!
Let us all be like the magic mirror from the carnival, reflecting the exact opposite of what comes to its view.
Let us show respect and admiration for all human beings who walk on earth, enjoy the differences and be thankful for all we may learn with each other. After all, we are all different but we're all the same: Humans.

(Your teachers)
Ibn Chabbat school. Redeyf. Tunisia
                   Genocide of Native Americans in the 15th Century
Their skin was dark. Their languages were foreign. And their world views and spiritual beliefs were beyond most white men’s comprehension. all this stoked racial hatred and paranoia, making it easy to paint Indigenous peoples as pagan savages who must be killed in the name of civilization and Christianity.
After the independence of the United States was recognized by the Great Britain in 1783, American settlers began their century-long westward expansion, largely by exterminating Native Americans and conquesting their lands. The US government authorized more than 1,500 wars, attacks and raids on Indians, the most of any country in the world against its indigenous people. When Columbus arrived in 1492, it's estimated that 5 million to 15 million lived in North America. The number declined sharply to fewer than 238,000 by the late 19th century. Native Americans were expelled from the lands that they had lived for generations and deprived of the right to life. The 1830 Indian Relocation Act compelled southeastern Indian tribes to move from east of the Mississippi River to the west. The westward journey was overseen and controlled by army and militia patrols.
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