The world view of the Navajo tribe who lived in the Colorado Plateau for centuries is one of nature and a well-balanced lifestyle as an administrator of their vast houses, including some of the four contemporary countries . They did not think that the concept of religion was separated from everyday life and prayed for many spirits. It is also a maternal society and the shepherd's lifestyle living in an independent family where they are dispersed does not have such a powerful leader as it does not need such an entity. This caused them to collide repeatedly with Spanish and Mexican, and increasingly more Americans opposed these men to their male-led religious megaliths in the mid-19th century.
Dine or Navajo exhibition at the Arizona Museum will be organized in an appropriate way. The exhibition first introduces the people of Diné and discusses Athapaskan Migration. That then shows a beautiful sand painting by Diné Bikeyah or the Diné who is home. Dine is a pastoralist who used other indigenous customs when moving from south to modern Arizona. - Navajo's view of the world who has lived in the plateau of the Colorado plateau for centuries has been balanced with nature as a managers of their vast motherlands, including some of the four modern countries It is a view of the world. They did not think that the concept of religion was separated from everyday life and prayed for many spirits. It is also a maternal society, their lifestyles live in a decentralized group of independent families and do not have a strong leader as they do not need such entities.
On June 18, 1868, the band, formerly known as Dene, departed together and departed for a "walking" house on the way home. This is one of the few examples that the US government allows tribes to return to traditional borders. Navajos acquired 3.5 million acres (14,000 square kilometers) of land in four sacred mountains. Navajos has also become a more coherent tribe after a long walk and since then it has successfully expanded their booking area beyond 16 million acres (70,000 square kilometers)
Navajo (Dinébizaad) is the language of Athabasca used by over 140,000 native speakers. More than half of Navajo speaks this language at home and is often used for everyday conversation. Many parents still pass Navajo as their first language to their children. Many Navajo languages still use that language, but in a recent survey, only 5% speak a fluent language out of school-age children of the reservation system. To cope with the loss of this language, immersive classes are offered in Navajo at many primary school courses currently booked. According to a study, Indian children who started school at Dyne (Navajo) in Arizona State Wind Rock and studied English as a second language got better grades in the second grade than classmates who started school in English It was. .