During grad school I read Oglala Sioux Russell Means' autobiography Where White Men Fear to Tread as part of a three-student special conference course (we also read a book on Latina literary criticism and Connie Panzarino's autobiography) for my public administration degree. We discussed the problems Native Americans have had with the federal government throughout the history of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), and we talked about how controversial Means is among Indians.
Means admits to his own violent tendencies within his marriages, as I recall, but the thing he said that has stuck with me the most is this: Means claims that generations of Indian children were physically and sexually abused in the boarding schools they were forced to attend. In addition to being stolen from their families, punished if they spoke their native language and many sterilized when they reached sexual maturity, that is. That's how a civilized nation commits genocide.
Image: Photo of a Thanksgiving Day play at an Indian boarding school, ca. 1900. Eight grade-school children are pictured, one seated girl in white pilgrim costume and two boys standing behind her wearing long feathered Indian headdresses. The other five children are seated on the floor with the pilgrim girl and seem to be wearing dark-colored school uniforms. Their facial expressions are sober, or even glum. From the Minnesota Historical Society Visual Database.
Happy holiday to everyone.
Going Native: Thanksgiving Day
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