Okay. I powered through the first half of the banned book, An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States in preparation for our Speakeasy. Now I have questions for my history teachers.
To be fair, I’m sure they taught me what was taught to them. It just wasn’t true. The persons we called “settlers” were nothing of the kind, because there was nothing on the continent than needed settling. The land had been well cultivated by the people living here. Until “settlers” drove them out. Our “settlers,” our military, and bands of mercenaries burned villages and crops, drove people from their homes, and massacred civilians, young and old. The practice of scalping that our films associate with Indigenous peoples came to this continent from its practice in the British Isles.
These war crimes were prompted and supported by our founders, including Presidents Andrew Jackson and George Washington. The novelist James Fenimore Cooper was complicit, using his art to perpetuate the lie of the savage. In truth, our nation was born out of genocide. And the slave trade.
Well, all this makes me miserable. I believed—was taught to believe—better of our founders. Better of the pilgrims, the “settlers,” the military. And I’m miserable, because my ancestors came from the British Isles. Who knows what some of them may have done? Still, I don’t want to be complicit through willful ignorance. So now what?
Jesus promised, “the truth will set you free.” Another wise human added, “but first it will make you miserable.”
Rethinking our beliefs is a miserable business. What do we stand on when the ground is shifting beneath our feet?
We stand on Truth, however miserable it makes us. And we stand in the power we have to live as we ought: recognizing our worth and the equal worth of others. In this season of self-reflection, we can do just that: choosing to do our own thinking. Choosing to live by values that help us reach our human potential and to be human toward others.
Acknowledging our ignorance, our biases, our mistakes, our faults takes courage. It’s miserable. And worth it. So, let’s keep seeking Truth. Let’s keep strengthening our souls by doing our own thinking. Let’s set ourselves free!
How do you stay open to truth? How do you deal with misery? What practices help you be who you want to be in the world? Share your thoughts at contact@aspaciousplace.com.
Tag Archives: Indigenous People
Soul & Solace: Hard Truths
Native American artists, exhibiting their work at the Blanton Museum, questioned me. Through photography, poetry, performance art, altar pieces, and collage, they asked: What is gender? Why national boundaries? How does language form belief? What are you not seeing?
The book, An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States, by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz challenged me to rethink the term “settler.” What did they settle, after all?
My history education, while it did not deny that Americans took the land of the native peoples; captured and enslaved persons from other lands; passed Jim Crow laws; and forced persons of Asian descent into internment camps, still managed to communicate that we were and are a good, decent nation. Really, the best of nations.
Rethinking those sanitized messages, realizing their impact on lives past and present, and the potential they carry for violence in the future hurt. I thought we were better. I thought we’d made more progress. I was wrong.
Ru Paul counsels us to look at the darkness, but don’t stare into it. How do we do that? Here are some ideas:
- Explore the visual, performance, and written art of persons on the margins;
- Do something that brings you joy;
- Receive news from more than one reputable source;
- Help someone who needs it;
- Use this link to discover whose native land your home/workplace/worship site is set on: https://native-land.ca/?emci=1c13d1ca-15a8-ef11-88d0-6045bdd62db6&emdi=777fea1a-47a9-ef11-88d0-6045bdd62db6&ceid=268119. Acknowledge that reality. Our home, and, thus the home of A Spacious Place, sits on land of the Comanche and Lipan Apache nations;
- Create something that speaks your truth!
We are, each of us, worthy of love and respect. Knowing that for ourselves, recognizing that for our neighbors—far and near—enables us to see the darkness, but live in the light.
What are your thoughts on our nation’s choices? How do you care for yourself and for others? Share your thoughts at contact@aspaciousplace.com.