Originating from the Latin word sacrificium, “ which is a combination of the words sacer, meaning something set apart from the secular or profane for the use of supernatural powers, and facere, meaning [‘to make’].” (Faherty) The earliest anyone has proposed the term sacrifice to be used is 1871 as a noun, relating to using sacrifices in religious ceremonies: “Sir Edward Burnett Tylor, a British anthropologist, proposed his theory that sacrifice was originally a gift to the gods to secure their favour or to minimize their hostility.” (Faherty) Another theory of how the word came about, again religiously related, Faherty also suggests William Robertson Smith’s ideology “that the original motive of sacrifice was an effort toward communion among the members of a group, on the one hand, and between them and their god, on the other.” During religious ceremonies when the term sacrifice was being used during this time period, people would present a “holy” human or animal to their god(s) in hope in return of relief from any issues or complications in their life or just a better situation in life in general. Native Americans used to do similar forms of sacrifice in different forms, including dancing, to the different gods of…