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Transito Amaguaña
I admire Transito Amaguaña because she was a Ecuadorian Indian and she fought for the Indian people rights. She has to live in a difficult era, and for last she is a big image for ecuatorian people.
Her parents lived in a farm landowner, so when she was a child she has to work since age seven, and she was required to get married when she was 14 years old. This was the principal reason to want to fight whit the landowner people. Transito began to perform community activism, first with the Socialist Party, and later in indigenous marches as 1930 “marches to Quito”, claiming land and labor rights.
Transito Amaguaña learned write and read, when she went to Cuba, because in Ecuador the education was prohibited for Indian people. She was on jail sometimes. Transito never accepted injustice whit her people. She made that landowners land returned the lands to Indians, she started Indian education creating four bilingual schools without government help.
She and communist people create the first Labor Code, later in 2003 she won the Eugenio Espejo Price, She was the leader of 26 marches in Quito by the claiming of rights for indigenous people and a founder in 1994 of the Ecuadorian Federation of Indians, among other organizations so that farmers were valued as human beings and not as animals
She died peacefully while she was sleeping, without any pain. A woman I admire, strong and simple, she has a pure heart, and always has a big smile in her face. She always will be in Indian people memories.
The Essay on Technologically Advanced Europeans People Indians
African and Native American Slavery Scot Ferguson 11-12-96 period 2 The 1500's, a time of discovery, was when the Europeans came to dominate most of the New World. The Europeans traveled to Africa and captured Africans to help develop their land and satisfy their need for power. I feel that the treatment of the Indians and Africans by the Europeans was completely unjustifiable. While the Indians ...