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Paperback The U.S. Constitution and the Great Law of Peace: A Comparison of Two Founding Documents Book

ISBN: 0966694821

ISBN13: 9780966694826

The U.S. Constitution and the Great Law of Peace: A Comparison of Two Founding Documents

Did American Indians influence the framers of the U.S. Constitution? After reading this text, U.S. Senators voted 100-0 to accept this fact. Dr. Schaaf testified in behalf of the Iroquois Confederacy at the Senate hearings. While the brief version, now out of print, has been used throughout the American school system, this is the first time the full text has been widely available. Featuring an introduction by Mohawk Chief Jake Swamp, co-founder of...

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American Indian influences on the U.S. Constitution

Featuring a foreward by Mohawk Chief Jake Swamp and comparison by Gregory Schaaf, Ph.D., this book offers clear evidence on American Indian influences on the U.S. Constitution. * A classic comparison of America's two original founding documents. * A contribution for teaching Constitutional rights. * Appropriate reading for children of all ages as well as adults. *Popular in public and private schools throughout the United States. Every American citizen should read and re-read the U.S. Constitution to understand our fundamental rights. This book presents the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights in comparison with similar passages from the Iroquois Great Law of Peace, America's oldest founding document. Perhaps a thousand years ago, the Great Law established the Iroquois Confederacy as a participatory democracy with separation of powers and rights for women. Arranged side-by-side in easy to read columns, the comparisons are startling and thought provoking. The evidence along with other testimony was considered so powerful and persuasive, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution 100-0 officially recognizing for the first time in history that the United States was "explicitly modeled upon the Iroquois Confederacy."
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