To:
From: John McAuliff <jmcauliff@igc.org>
Subject: another view of Thanksgiving
Dear friends and colleagues,
I hope you had as pleasant a Thanksgiving as we did.
Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday. Somehow it has remained a family and
friends centered event and escaped most of the commercialism that diminishes
Christmas. However, the celebration of Thanksgiving does have its
contradictory aspects as suggested by the following Native American
perspective.
As the Bush Administration proceeds with war in Afghanistan with overwhelming
public support and shows increasing signs of wanting to move on to Iraq, it is
at least worth reflecting on the complicated reality that our justifiable pride
in the political and economic achievement of the US (and of our own formerly
immigrant families) has a dark side in ethnic cleansing, genocide, slavery and
territorial expansion.
History cannot be undone and must not paralyze us from living and making hard
choices in the present, but awareness of it should moderate our
self-righteousness and help us to understand why much of the world does not
regard our motives as purely and nobly as we do.
John McAuliff
Thanksgiving: A Native
American View
Jacqueline Keeler, Pacific News Service
November 21, 1997
I celebrate the holiday of Thanksgiving.This may surprise
those people who wonder what Native Americans think of this official U.S.
celebration of the survival of early arrivals in a European invasion that
culminated in the death of 10 to 30 million native people.Thanksgiving to me
has never been about Pilgrims. When I was six, my mother, a woman of the Dineh
nation, told my sister and me not to sing "Land of the Pilgrim's
pride" in "America the Beautiful." Our people, she said, had
been here much longer and taken much better care of the land. We were to sing
"Land of the Indian's pride" instead.I was proud to sing the new
lyrics in school, but I sang softly. It was enough for me to know the difference.
At six, I felt I had learned something very important. As a child of a Native
American family, you are part of a very select group of survivors, and I
learned that my family possessed some "inside" knowledge of what
really happened when those poor, tired masses came to our homes.When the
Pilgrims came to Plymouth Rock, they were poor and hungry -- half of them died
within a few months from disease and hunger. When Squanto, a Wampanoag man,
found them, they were in a pitiful state. He spoke English, having traveled to
Europe, and took pity on them. Their English crops had failed. The native
people fed them through the winter and taught them how to grow their food.These
were not merely "friendly Indians." They had already experienced
European slave traders raiding their villages for a hundred years or so, and
they were wary -- but it was their way to give freely to those who had nothing.
Among many of our peoples, showing that you can give without holding back is
the way to earn respect. Among the Dakota, my father's people, they say, when
asked to give, "Are we not Dakota and alive?" It was believed that by
giving there would be enough for all -- the! exact opposite of the system we
live in now, which is based on selling, not giving.To the Pilgrims, and most
English and European peoples, the Wampanoags were heathens, and of the Devil.
They saw Squanto not as an equal but as an instrument of their God to help his
chosen people, themselves.Since that initial sharing, Native American food has
spread around the world. Nearly 70 percent of all crops grown today were
originally cultivated by Native American peoples. I sometimes wonder what they
ate in Europe before they met us. Spaghetti without tomatoes? Meat and potatoes
without potatoes? And at the "first Thanksgiving" the Wampanoags
provided most of the food -- and signed a treaty granting Pilgrims the right to
the land at Plymouth, the real reason for the first Thanksgiving.What did the
Europeans give in return? Within 20 years European disease and treachery had
decimated the Wampanoags. Most diseases then came from animals that Europeans
had domesticated. Cowpox from cows ! led to smallpox, one of the great killers
of our people, spread through gifts of blankets used by infected Europeans.
Some estimate that diseases accounted for a death toll reaching 90 percent in
some Native American communities. By 1623, Mather the elder, a Pilgrim leader,
was giving thanks to his God for destroying the heathen savages to make way
"for a better growth," meaning his people.In stories told by the
Dakota people, an evil person always keeps his or her heart in a secret place
separate from the body. The hero must find that secret place and destroy the
heart in order to stop the evil.I see, in the "First Thanksgiving"
story, a hidden Pilgrim heart. The story of that heart is the real tale than
needs to be told. What did it hold? Bigotry, hatred, greed, self-righteousness?
We have seen the evil that it caused in the 350 years since. Genocide,
environmental devastation, poverty, world wars, racism.Where is the hero who
will destroy that heart of evil? I believe it must be each of us. Indeed, when
I give thanks this Thursday and I cook my native food, I will be thinking of
this hidden heart and how my ancestors survived the evil it caused.Because if
we can survive, with our ability to share and to give intact, then the evil and
the good will that met that Thanksgiving day in the land of the Wampanoag will
have come full circle.And the healing can begin.Jacqueline Keeler, a member
of the Dineh Nation and the Yankton Dakota Sioux works with the American Indian
Child Resource Center in Oakland, California. Her work has appeared in Winds of
Change, an American Indian journal.