Pocahontas Essay

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In 1995, Disney’s Pocahontas showed the world their version of what it was like to be a young Native American girl in the early 1600s. However, the movie was very different from what actually happened because the creators were more interested in telling a good story than in sticking to reality. Although there were some clever references to the history, many important facts were left out. It is important to understand Pocahontas’ life because she broke down barriers between the Native American and the Englishman's communities. John Rolfe and Pocahontas’ unique tale of love has caught eyes of millions of people. Even though she only lived to 22, the story of her life has been told for 400 years. Pocahontas was born around 1595 in Virginia with …show more content…

Pocahontas lived peacefully with her father, Powhatan, her five brothers, and sister. Her father gave Amonute a nickname: Pocahontas meaning “playful one”. Her father adored Pocahontas: she was his favorite child out of his many, many children. In Pocahontas’ culture, it is normal for women and men of any age to contribute to their village by working. Pocahontas would work with the deer skin to make clothing, and would find reed to make mats. Powhatan was a very smart and clever man. When he was ordered to go to a meeting, he would send a man who looked like him so that if his double was killed, the real Powhatan would still be alive. Powhatan’s tactics kept their tribe alive, and their sacred land safe. (Young …show more content…

They started trading in the cold winters, and Pocahontas accompanied the Natives who took food to Jamestown. The colony was saved thanks to John Smith and Pocahontas. She convinced Smith to let the Native American prisoners from neighboring villages go. Pocahontas was very friendly to the settlers and often went to the colony to play and chat. Powhatan then adopted Smith as his son, "Nantaquoud". Many of the settlers wrote about Pocahontas running around Jamestown naked and doing cartwheels. The relationship between the colonists and Powhatans was strong until 1609, when John Smith severely burned his leg in a gunpowder explosion accident, and immediately sailed back to England for medical care. (“Pocahontas”,

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