For African Americans and Native Americans, the 19th century was a difficult time. The treatment of these people in a white society has brought a lot of suffering and suffering to their race. This is because African Americans and Native Americans were dealt with enough in the relationship with Caucasian society as ethnicity played an important role in society in the 19th century. It is widely believed that the role of African Americans in society is inferior to Caucasians.
In the nineteenth century, not only African Americans but also Native Americans, Mexican American Americans, Chinese Americans, etc were racial discrimination times. The majority of non-European and even Irish racial discrimination is for economic and political purposes. For example, slavery in Africa brought about free labor and increased political influence in southern slave countries. At the end of the nineteenth century, the United States experienced another wave of European immigrants. The immigrants were Southern Europeans and Eastern Europeans, and their existence challenged the idea of race, especially who was white and who was not. Unlike the early European immigrants, most of them are German, Scandinavian and Irish, these new immigrants are Polish, Italian, Jewish and have different customs and traditions from the European predecessors It was.
Genizaros are descendants of slaves, but working in cotton fields in the south is not binding of Africans across the Atlantic. They are heirs of slaves in America. From the 18th century to the 19th century, American Indian women and children were acquired during the war, converted to Catholicism, taught Spanish and been enslaved by New Mexico family. Eventually, these non-attributing Spanishized Indians were assimilated in New Mexico society. The name genizaro is a Spanish priest and prisoners serve the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. In Mexico's new Genisaro there are things that protect their liberties by working as soldiers to protect border villages like Abiquiu from Indian attacks. By the end of the 18th century genizaros accounted for one third of the population of New Mexico.