Chapter 2 True/False Self-Quiz (Level 1)

Quiz Content

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. The indigenous religions of North America are all essentially the same.

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. The Kinaalda is a rite of passage for young Lakota women.

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. Mythic narratives may contain stories about creation, supreme beings, and humanity.

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. Changing Woman is an important figure in Navajo religious tradition.

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. Among the Pueblo peoples, ancestral spirits are known as kachinas.

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. Myths of North America may account for the origins of subsistence activities like hunting and farming.

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. Usually, the goal of the vision quest is for an individual to make contact with the spirit world.

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. Black Elk was a famous Cherokee religious leader.

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. Native American religions emphasize the idea that humans are the masters of animals and other living creatures.

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. According to Native American religious traditions, humanity is often thought to live in a reciprocal relationship with the land.

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. The White Mountain Apache of Arizona place great importance on the landscape.

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. European imperialism from the sixteenth century through the early twentieth century radically influenced indigenous religious traditions in the Americas.

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. Throughout North America, the effects of colonialism on indigenous peoples were very insignificant.

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. In 1978, the American Indian Religious Freedom Act was passed in an effort to give Native peoples the right to express and practice their beliefs.

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. Today, the only people interested in Native American religions are Native peoples.

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. The population of the Americas was decimated after the arrival of Europeans.

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