Pilgrim's Progress
Why Christians Should Not Celebrate Thanksgiving
Dinner Conversation
Approximately 1.5 million Native Americans and Alaskan Natives
live on designated reservations in the United States today. All
but a few of these reservations are plagued with poverty,
unemployment, homelessness, lack of medical care, and
insufficient educational resources.
The per capita earning averages $4,500, with unemployment
approaching 70 percent. 50% of Native American reservation homes
have no phones and 1/5 of the homes lack complete kitchen
facilities.
In 1907, Susan La Fleshe Picotte, the first Native American
woman doctor, wrote a letter to the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs. Her letter described the health conditions and needs of
her tribe, the Omahas.
She began her letter with, “If you knew the conditions…”
Imagine how it would sadden Dr. Picotte to know that, in over
100 years, things have not changed.
Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community
When the Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center conducted
research last year examining the prevalence and realities of the
trafficking of Native American girls in Minnesota, they
unearthed a long silent crisis afflicting the health and
well-being of thousands of Native girls and women. The report,
released last fall and entitled “Shattered Hearts: The
Commercial Sexual Exploitation of American Indian Women and
Girls,” describes the experiences of girls involved in
prostitution and recommends steps for action. But perhaps most
importantly, it also contextualizes the unique vulnerability
that Native women face, years before they are ever trafficked.
The MIWRC report defines a “social ecology” that places the
individual at the center of a dizzying orbit of social
influence, from the national down to the family. This influence
grows out of a context, and the report identifies policies that
have shaped a traumatic history.
Colonization
In the process of developing trade and military relationships
with American Indian villages, early British colonists viewed
the sexual and marital norms of Native communities through their
own ethnocentric lens. As a result, they interpreted Native
women’s sexual and reproductive freedom to be proof of their
promiscuity and depravity … These attitudes justified colonists’
assaults on Native women and Native land.
Genocide
Following the establishment of the United States, the U.S.
Supreme Court and Congress redefined the status of American
Indian people, declaring that they were wards of the U.S.
government and citizens of ‘dependent nations,’ stripping them
of their rights to their land, to self-governance, and to
negotiating as independent nations. As the new nation expanded
westward, the U.S. government adopted formal extermination
policies to clear Native-occupied land for settlement. Native
women were primary targets of these policies due to their
reproductive ability to assure the continuance of their people.
Exploitation
of A Nation:
Children outside the Indian boarding school at Cantonment,
Okla., c. 1909
Image: Library of Congress
Forced Migration
The relocation of Indian people to remote rural reservations by
the U.S. Army, where they were forced to depend on the U.S.
government for all of their basic needs.
Assimilation
The removal of Native children from their homes, often forcibly,
to attend government-funded residential boarding schools where
they were severely punished for speaking their native language,
pressured to adopt the ‘superior’ values and behaviors of the
dominant Christian society, and subjected to physical and sexual
abuse by school teachers and administrators.
Forced Sterilization/Eugenics
The sterilization of American Indian women and girls as young as
15 in an effort to control Native populations. By 1975, an
estimated 25,000 American Indian women and girls had been given
hysterectomies by Indian Health Services physicians without
their consent, and sometimes without their knowledge during
appendectomies and other surgeries.
The lack of a holistic, collective recognition of genocidal
policy towards Native Americans is an astonishing phenomenon in
an age so infused with talk about social justice. As a nation,
the United States has never come together to acknowledge the
atrocities inflicted on Native peoples in the fullness of all of
their consequences.
According to the report, when a dominant society refuses to recognize a people’s grief
and losses as legitimate, the result is sadness, anger, and
shame, feeling helpless and powerless, struggles with feelings
of inferiority, and difficulty with self-identity. This
negatively impacts interpersonal relationships and Native
peoples’ sense of themselves as sacred beings.
A Perfect Storm: Behind the Trafficking of Minnesota’s
Native American Girls
One indication of moral progress
in the United States would be the replacement of Thanksgiving
Day and its self-indulgent family feasting with a National Day
of Atonement accompanied by a self-reflective collective
fasting.
In fact, indigenous people have offered such a model; since 1970
they have marked the fourth Thursday of November as a Day of
Mourning in a spiritual/political ceremony on Coles Hill
overlooking Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts, one of the early sites
of the European invasion of the Americas.
From an early age, we Americans hear a story about the hearty
Pilgrims, whose search for freedom took them from England to
Massachusetts. There, aided by the friendly Wampanoag Indians,
they survived in a new and harsh environment, leading to a
harvest feast in 1621 following the Pilgrims first winter.
Some aspects of the conventional story are true enough. But it's
also true that by 1637 Massachusetts Gov. John Winthrop was
proclaiming a thanksgiving for the successful massacre of
hundreds of Pequot Indian men, women and children, part of the
long and bloody process of opening up additional land to the
English invaders. The pattern would repeat itself across the
continent until between 95 and 99 percent of American Indians
had been exterminated and the rest were left to assimilate into
white society or die off on reservations, out of the view of
polite society.
Simply put: Thanksgiving is the day when the dominant white
culture (and, sadly, most of the rest of the non-white but
non-indigenous population) celebrates the beginning of a
genocide that was, in fact, blessed by the men we hold up as our
heroic founding fathers.
The first president, George Washington, in 1783 said he
preferred buying Indians' land rather than driving them off it
because that was like driving "wild beasts" from the forest. He
compared Indians to wolves, "both being beasts of prey, tho'
they differ in shape."
Thomas Jefferson — president #3 and author of the Declaration
of Independence, which refers to Indians as the "merciless
Indian Savages" — was known to romanticize Indians and their
culture, but that didn't stop him in 1807 from writing to his
secretary of war that in a coming conflict with certain tribes,
"[W]e shall destroy all of them."
As the genocide was winding down in the early 20th century,
Theodore Roosevelt (president #26) defended the expansion of
whites across the continent as an inevitable process "due solely
to the power of the mighty civilized races which have not lost
the fighting instinct, and which by their expansion are
gradually bringing peace into the red wastes where the barbarian
peoples of the world hold sway."
Roosevelt also once said, "I don't go so far as to think that
the only good Indians are dead Indians, but I believe nine out
of ten are, and I shouldn't like to inquire too closely into the
case of the tenth."
Robert Jensen, AlterNet. Posted
November 23, 2005
In 1614, a band of English explorers
had landed in the vicinity of Massachusetts Bay. When they
returned home, they took with them Native slaves they had
captured, and left smallpox behind. By the time the Puritan
pilgrims sailed the Mayflower into southern Massachusetts Bay,
entire nations of New England Natives were already extinct,
having been totally exterminated by smallpox.
The Puritans were religious radicals being driven into exile out
of England. Since their story is well known, I will not repeat
it here. They settled and built a colony which they called the
"Plymouth Plantation", near the ruins of a former Native village
of the Pawtuxet Nation. Only one Pawtuxet had survived, a man
named Squanto, who had spent time as a slave to the English.
Since he understood the language and customs of the Puritans, he
taught them to use the corn growing wild from the abandoned
fields of the village, taught them to fish, and about the foods,
herbs and fruits of this land. Squanto also negotiated a peace
treaty between the Puritans and the Wampanoag Nation, a very
large Native nation which totally surrounded the new Plymouth
Plantation. Because of Squanto's efforts, the Puritans enjoyed
almost 15 years of peaceful harmony with the surrounding
Natives, and they prospered.
At the end of their first year, the Puritans held a great feast
following the harvest of their new farming efforts. The feast
honored Squanto and their friends, the Wampanoags. The feast was
followed by 3 days of "thanksgiving" celebrating their good
fortune. This feast produced the image of the first Thanksgiving
that we all grew up with as children. However, things were
doomed to change.
Until approximately 1629, there were only about 300 Puritans
living in widely scattered settlements around New England. As
word leaked back to England about their peaceful and prosperous
life, more Puritans arrived by the boatloads. As the numbers of
Puritans grew, the question of ownership of the land became a
major issue. The Puritans came from the belief of individual
needs and prosperity, and had no concept of tribal living, or
group sharing. It was clear that these heathen savages had no
claim on the land because it had never been subdued, cultivated
and farmed in the European manner, and there were no fences or
other boundaries marked. The land was clearly "public domain",
and there for the taking. This attitude met with great
resistance from the original Puritans who held their Native
benefactors in high regard. These first Puritan settlers were
summarily excommunicated and expelled from the church.
With Bible passages in their hands to justify their every move,
the Puritans began their march inland from the seaside
communities. Joined by British settlers, they seized land, took
the strong and young Natives as slaves to work the land, and
killed the rest. When they reached the Connecticut Valley around
1633, they met a different type of force. The Pequot Nation,
very large and very powerful, had never entered into the peace
treaty negotiated by Squanto as had other New England Native
nations. When two slave raiders were killed by resisting
Natives, the Puritans demanded that the killers be turned over.
The Pequot refused. What followed was the Pequot War, the
bloodiest of the Native wars in the northeast.
An army of over 200 settlers was formed, joined by over 1,000
Narragansett warriors. Because of the lack of fighting
experience, and the vast numbers of the fierce Pequot warriors,
Commander John Mason elected not to stage an open battle.
Instead, the Pequot were attacked, one village at a time, in the
hours before dawn. Each village was set on fire with its
sleeping Natives burned alive. Women and children over 14 were
captured to be sold as slaves; other survivors were massacred.
The Natives were sold into slavery in The West Indies, the
Azures, Spain, Algiers and England; everywhere the Puritan
merchants traded. The slave trade was so lucrative that
boatloads of 500 at a time left the harbors of New England.
In 1641, the Dutch governor of Manhattan offered the first scalp
bounty; a common practice in many European countries. This was
broadened by the Puritans to include a bounty for Natives fit to
be sold for slavery. The Dutch and Puritans joined forces to
exterminate all Natives from New England, and village after
village fell. Following an especially successful raid against
the Pequot in what is now Stamford, Connecticut, the churches of
Manhattan announced a day of "thanksgiving" to celebrate victory
over the heathen savages. This was the 2nd Thanksgiving. During
the feasting, the hacked off heads of Natives were kicked
through the streets of Manhattan like soccer balls.
Julia White (with Terye Gonzalez, Apache), Ishgooda.Org