We Want Equal Rights!: How Suffragists Were Influenced by Haudenosaunee Women
Synopsis:
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This is the story of remarkable women who laid the foundation for the modern women's movement and the Native American nation that proved equality was possible. In 1850, these brave women challenged a culture that believed they were inferior to men. How did they envision such a world? They looked to their neighbors the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) and saw how women were held in high regard, with even greater rights than men. In the United States, a woman was considered subservient to her husband, who gained all his wife's wealth upon marriage. Women had no claim to their children and were considered runaway slaves if they left an abusive man. In contrast Haudenosaunee society provided a shining example of what is possible when women are treated with respect. Read how early activists forged a path to women's equal rights using the ideals of their Native American neighbors.
Educator Information
Recommended for ages 9 to 12.
This work is from an American publisher. Therefore, terminology may be different than what is used in Canada.
Subjects / Concepts: Human Rights, Women's Rights, Native American, Indigenous, History, Biographies, Social Activists.
Additional Information
48 pages | 7.90" x 9.40" | Paperback