How did Chief Seattle view the pale-faced people?
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The Chief also feels that God is ignorant of the native people. If the God of the natives is the same as the God of the Whites, then He has abandoned His Red children. He favours His pale-faced children more than the natives. ... Hence, they will never be able to understand the value of the land as the natives.
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He found them different from the natives.
- The question has been asked from the story The Chief Seattle's Speech.
- The Whites offered a land pact to Chief Seattle. He was upset because the property held a great deal of emotional significance for him.
- Through this speech, he expressed numerous concerns, views, and bittersweet request. He believed that both races' Gods are not the sameand claimed on them being, distinct at various levels.
- He also believed that God is unconcerned with the natives. If the locals' God is the same as the Whites' God, then he has abandoned the red children. He prefers his pale-skinned children to the locals.
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