For more info on the National Day of Mourning, see the website of the United 
American Indians of New England at: http://home.earthlink.net/%7Euainendom/


Thanksgiving: A National Day of Mourning for Indians 
by Moonanum James and Mahtowin Munro 

Every year since 1970, United American Indians of New England have organized 
the National Day of Mourning observance in Plymouth at noon on Thanksgiving 
Day. Every year, hundreds of Native people and our supporters from all four 
directions join us. Every year, including this year, Native people from 
throughout the Americas will speak the truth about our history and about 
current issues and struggles we are involved in. 

Why do hundreds of people stand out in the cold rather than sit home eating 
turkey and watching football? Do we have something against a harvest 
festival? 

Of course not. But Thanksgiving in this country -- and in particular in 
Plymouth --is much more than a harvest home festival. It is a celebration of 
the pilgrim mythology. 

According to this mythology, the pilgrims arrived, the Native people fed them 
and welcomed them, the Indians promptly faded into the background, and 
everyone lived happily ever after. 

The truth is a sharp contrast to that mythology. 

The pilgrims are glorified and mythologized because the circumstances of the 
first English-speaking colony in Jamestown were frankly too ugly (for 
example, they turned to cannibalism to survive) to hold up as an effective 
national myth. The pilgrims did not find an empty land any more than Columbus 
"discovered" anything. Every inch of this land is Indian land. The pilgrims 
(who did not even call themselves pilgrims) did not come here seeking 
religious freedom; they already had that in Holland. They came here as part 
of a commercial venture. They introduced sexism, racism, anti-lesbian and gay 
bigotry, jails, and the class system to these shores. One of the very first 
things they did when they arrived on Cape Cod -- before they even made it to 
Plymouth -- was to rob Wampanoag graves at Corn Hill and steal as much of the 
Indians' winter provisions of corn and beans as they were able to carry. They 
were no better than any other group of Europeans when it came to their 
treatment of the Indigenous peoples here. And no, they did not even land at 
that sacred shrine called Plymouth Rock, a monument to racism and oppression 
which we are proud to say we buried in 1995. 

The first official "Day of Thanksgiving" was proclaimed in 1637 by Governor 
Winthrop. He did so to celebrate the safe return of men from the 
Massachusetts Bay Colony who had gone to Mystic, Connecticut to participate 
in the massacre of over 700 Pequot women, children, and men. 

About the only true thing in the whole mythology is that these pitiful 
European strangers would not have survived their first several years in "New 
England" were it not for the aid of Wampanoag people. What Native people got 
in return for this help was genocide, theft of our lands, and never-ending 
repression. We are treated either as quaint relics from the past, or are, to 
most people, virtually invisible. 

When we dare to stand up for our rights, we are considered unreasonable. When 
we speak the truth about the history of the European invasion, we are often 
told to "go back where we came from." Our roots are right here. They do not 
extend across any ocean. 

National Day of Mourning began in 1970 when a Wampanoag man, Wamsutta Frank 
James, was asked to speak at a state dinner celebrating the 350th anniversary 
of the pilgrim landing. He refused to speak false words in praise of the 
white man for bringing civilization to us poor heathens. Native people from 
throughout the Americas came to Plymouth, where they mourned their forebears 
who had been sold into slavery, burned alive, massacred, cheated, and 
mistreated since the arrival of the Pilgrims in 1620. 

But the commemoration of National Day of Mourning goes far beyond the 
circumstances of 1970. 

Can we give thanks as we remember Native political prisoner Leonard Peltier, 
who was framed up by the FBI and has been falsely imprisoned since 1976? 
Despite mountains of evidence exonerating Peltier and the proven misconduct 
of federal prosecutors and the FBI, Peltier has been denied a new trial. Bill 
Clinton apparently does not feel that particular pain and has refused to 
grant clemency to this innocent man. 

To Native people, the case of Peltier is one more ordeal in a litany of 
wrongdoings committed by the U.S. government against us. While the media in 
New England present images of the "Pequot miracle" in Connecticut, the vast 
majority of Native people continue to live in the most abysmal poverty. 

Can we give thanks for the fact that, on many reservations, unemployment 
rates surpass fifty percent? Our life expectancies are much lower, our infant 
mortality and teen suicide rates much higher, than those of white Americans. 
Racist stereotypes of Native people, such as those perpetuated by the 
Cleveland Indians, the Atlanta Braves, and countless local and national 
sports teams, persist. Every single one of the more than 350 treaties that 
Native nations signed has been broken by the U.S. government. The bipartisan 
budget cuts have severely reduced educational opportunities for Native youth 
and the development of new housing on reservations, and have caused cause 
deadly cutbacks in health-care and other necessary services. 

Are we to give thanks for being treated as unwelcome in our own country? 

Or perhaps we are expected to give thanks for the war that is being waged by 
the Mexican government against Indigenous peoples there, with the military 
aid of the U.S. in the form of helicopters and other equipment? When the 
descendants of the Aztec, Maya, and Inca flee to the U.S., the descendants of 
the wash-ashore pilgrims term them 'illegal aliens" and hunt them down. 

We object to the "Pilgrim Progress" parade and to what goes on in Plymouth 
because they are making millions of tourist dollars every year from the false 
pilgrim mythology. That money is being made off the backs of our slaughtered 
indigenous ancestors. 

Increasing numbers of people are seeking alternatives to such holidays as 
Columbus Day and Thanksgiving. They are coming to the conclusion that, if we 
are ever to achieve some sense of community, we must first face the truth 
about the history of this country and the toll that history has taken on the 
lives of millions of Indigenous, Black, Latino, Asian, and poor and working 
class white people. 

The myth of Thanksgiving, served up with dollops of European superiority and 
manifest destiny, just does not work for many people in this country. As 
Malcolm X once said about the African-American experience in America, "We did 
not land on Plymouth Rock. Plymouth Rock landed on us." Exactly. 


[Mahtowin Munro (Lakota) and Moonanum James (Wampanoag) are co-leaders of 
United American Indians of New England.] 

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