
A Google user
Q. What did you think of this historical episode? A. It was truly, as the subtitle hints, a sad tale. And as the title says, it was a betrayal of the Cherokees by people in power at that time, especially Andrew Jackson. I felt ashamed myself, though I am fairly sure my progenitors were not Americans at that time. Q. So Daniel gets his points across? A. Yes. He quotes primary sources almost exclusively, which may be difficult for some readers, since people in the 1830s did not talk or write as we do now. But it adds authenticity. He really does very little analysis himself, but he does conclude that the Treaty Signers were doing the best they could in their own way. He indicates that many historians consider these Treat Signers as traitors to the Cherokee Nation. Q. So the book aroused in you a feeling of shame? A. Yes. The story shows clearly how greed overcomes all moral scruples, or simply that might makes right. To me, this is truly a human failing that America stands to repel, and it does so to a certain extent today. But we all know that words and symbols are just that and that the shot callers in America are still mostly greedy people, just as the white Georgians Daniel writes about in this book. However, the Cherokees, the Ross adherents, showed no more morality by preying on the weakest among themselves. They never went after the real culprits. Q. Who were the real culprits? A. The avaricious Georgians, their politicians, and Jackson himself. But the Cherokees had no fire power, so there was no way they could fight white Americans. It is just a sad tale. I do not know much about Native Americans but it is obvious, in this book at least, that they were treated unfairly, lied to, and, as Daniel mentions on behalf of some historians, subject to what we would today call ethnic cleansing. All Americans today bear some of that guilt, whether descendants of those greedy whites or not. Q. That is your opinion, of course. Maybe you are being a bit emotional about it? A. Possibly. The story may arouse such emotions in all readers. Read it and see.