Answer:
Don Ray’s desire to gain insight into his home country of Canada took him to an unexpected place — Africa.
While in university, Ray was faced with the choice of studying either Canadian or African politics.
“I thought that I would better understand my country by understanding what was happening in other parts of the world and then bringing lessons back from there to Canada.”
Now a professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Calgary, Ray is still learning lessons in Africa that he hopes to share with the North.
Explanation:
Answer
Cabeza de Vaca was a Spanish explorer of the New World, and one of four survivors of the 1527 Narváez expedition. The survivors lived among the natives of the region for four years, and Cabeza de Vaca carved out roles as a trader and a healer in the community. In 1532 he and the other three surviving members of his original party set out for Mexico, where they hoped to connect with other representatives of the Spanish empire. They traveled through Texas, and possibly what are now New Mexico and Arizona, before arriving in northern Mexico in 1536, where they met up with fellow Spaniards, who were in the region to capture slaves. Cabeza de Vaca deplored the Spanish explorers' treatment of Indians, and when he returned home in 1537 he advocated for changes in Spain's policy. After a brief term as governor of a province in Mexico, he became a judge in Seville, Spain, a position he occupied for the remainder of his life.
Future Explorations:
Cabeza de Vaca’s stories concerning the cities of Cíbola caused much excitement in New Spain and the rush to find gold in New Mexico was precipitated by his statement that the Indians at one point in his journey (in the upper Sonora Valley) told him that in the mountain country to the north were some “towns with big houses and many people” with whom they traded parrot feathers for turquoise. These towns were the group of six Zuni pueblos in western New Mexico. The Indians pointed the way to the pueblos and it was thought at the time that these pueblos were in the area of the large buffalo herds of which the Spaniards had vague information.
His stories of gold in New Mexico caused a rush of people to go to New Mexico, which then caused future explorations (influenced new explorations).
1- Jim Crow laws are laws that were made to legalize racial segregation
2- Changes in the constitution allowed African Americans freedom but after reconstruction laws were made to limit their freedom
3- Their lives changed in that they were no longer slaves and forced to labor but what stayed the same was the fact that they were still under oppression
4-Booker T. Washington proposed that economic progress would prove whites African Americans value and W.E.B Dubois believed you had to educate and fight.
Explanation: Since its asking for my personal opinion i will give you my response.
I think that we should obey the govs laws bc they are there to make sure we are safe. If there were not rules in place then this country would be a mess. (America.) I'm not saying all the rules are okay. Some shouldn't be there but they are sadly.