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Why do native american villages keep a vacant house called strangers’ house?

User ZeFrenchy
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the answer is C to offer a warm place to sleep and have conversations after a meal
User George Marmaridis
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The answer is to offer a warm place to sleep and have conversations after a meal.

In the words of Benjamin Franklin in an essay he wrote about Native Americans...

There is in every village a vacant dwelling, called the stranger’s house. Here they are placed while the old men go round from hut to hut, acquainting the inhabitants that strangers are arrived, who are probably hungry and weary; and every one sends them what he can spare of victuals, and skins to repose on. When the strangers are refreshed, pipes and tobacco are brought; and then, but not before, conversation begins, with inquiries who they are, whither bound, what news, etc.; and it usually ends with offers of service, if the strangers have occasion of guides, or any necessaries for continuing their journey; and nothing is exacted for the entertainment.