Columbus
Day
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Columbus Day or Indigenous Peoples Day
The 2nd Monday in May may be the federally recognized
holid/ay of Columbus Day, but millions across the country
will instead observe Indigenous Peoples Day, now
officially observed in some states and cities.
When Christopher Columbus arrived in what is now known as
North America, the region was hardly unoccupied. It was not
a New World to be discovered but home to
millions of diverse,
Indigenous people with their own cultures, languages and
sovereignty who had occupied
the land for thousands of years.
Historians agree that for people indigenous to the
Americas, the arrival of Columbus and the Europeans who
followed him was a calamity of catastrophic
proportions. Over time, the population was decimated
through war, disease, enslavement,
forced
displacement and outright
murder.
White European colonizers defended their actions through
the Discovery
Doctrine, the ruthless notion that land they
discovered belonged to them, with no regard to
whether that land was occupied
by people native to it.
Those who survived were stripped not only of their
ancestral lands but of their cultural heritage through
forced
assimilation in brutal Christian missions and
government-run boarding schools, injustices that lasted well
into the 20th century.
American Indians were not granted
U.S. citizenship until 1924 and were
not given the right to vote until 1948. They were not
granted religious
freedom or the right to determine the welfare
of children in their communities until 1978.
The effects of colonization are clear today.
A quarter of American Indians and Alaska Natives
live
in poverty and experience extreme inequities in
employment
and housing. Many Indigenous nations are still
working to reclaim their languages, traditional
ceremonies and spiritual practices. American Indians and
Alaska Natives face significant barriers to exercising
their right to vote, especially after the U.S. Supreme
Court gutted Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. And
Euro-American culture continues to homogenize,
appropriate and commodify the very same cultural
practices that Indigenous peoples themselves were
discouraged from openly expressing through state-sponsored
violence.
Its past time to rethink history.
Our Teaching
Tolerance program is working to ensure that educators
have the resources they need to reframe a Eurocentric view
of U.S. history that dismisses the humanity and the
histories of the first occupants of this land.
Our online
resources include primary source texts of Native
peoples experiences and culturally responsive lessons
that work to undo stereotypes about American Indians.
Were also hosting a professional learning webinar to
help educators learn more about Indigenous history in the
United States and to provide tools for bringing it into
their classrooms.
And just this fall, we released our latest teaching
framework, Teaching
Hard History: American Slavery, which includes ample
resources for educators to teach about Indigenous
enslavement, which began with Columbus and occurred
alongside African enslavement in the territory that is now
the United States.
This Monday, rather than celebrate Columbus arrival
in North America and the massive cultural erasure that
followed, we can honor the survival and cultural heritage of
the diverse American Indians and Alaska Natives more
than 5 million in the present-day United States
whove found resilience and perseverance in spite of
political, social and economic barriers. We can honor the
countless historical, cultural and diverse contributions
that Native people have and continue to make.
We can practice a more ethical remembering by celebrating
the history of Indigenous peoples whose
land we reside on and by sharing stories of Native
resilience, like the stories of Debra Haaland and Sharice
Davids, the first Native American women elected to Congress;
or Joy Harjo, the first Native American U.S. poet laureate;
or the leadership of Indigenous
peoples in the climate justice movement.
Observing Indigenous Peoples Day instead of
Columbus Day is an important step in dismantling a white
supremacist understanding of U.S. history. This Monday, we
encourage you to join with us in celebrating the rich
history, wisdom and resiliency of American Indians and
Alaska Natives.
Source: Southern Poverty Law
Center
Source:
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