After all the opposition, corruption, and disappointment, Zitkala-Sa gradually lost her faith in the Great Spirit. It can be clearly seen from her sayings that the Great Spirit does not care if we live or die. In her work “Why I am Pagan” she disputes a respectful and religious Christian to see the beauty of Indian beliefs, their passion to cognize the beauty of nature, love to the universe, and acceptance of every person as being irreplaceable part of God’s creature. Furthermore, Zitkala-Sa strongly debates that God did not appeal the white man to ruin the great Indian culture, destroy their motherlands, or punish Native American children for speaking in their mother tongue. She uses all her efforts to convince people from the idea of believing that the Native American traditions were sinful and
After all the opposition, corruption, and disappointment, Zitkala-Sa gradually lost her faith in the Great Spirit. It can be clearly seen from her sayings that the Great Spirit does not care if we live or die. In her work “Why I am Pagan” she disputes a respectful and religious Christian to see the beauty of Indian beliefs, their passion to cognize the beauty of nature, love to the universe, and acceptance of every person as being irreplaceable part of God’s creature. Furthermore, Zitkala-Sa strongly debates that God did not appeal the white man to ruin the great Indian culture, destroy their motherlands, or punish Native American children for speaking in their mother tongue. She uses all her efforts to convince people from the idea of believing that the Native American traditions were sinful and