Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Thanksgiving, myths, and Public Schools...

Giving Thanks for Genocide?
by Mona Charen
http://townhall.com/columnists/MonaCharen/2008/11/25/giving_thanks_for_genocide

Thanksgiving is coming -- a time to participate in the great American tradition of maligning and abusing our ancestors. Last year, Seattle public school administrators warned teachers that "Thanksgiving can be a particularly difficult time for many of our Native students." Accordingly, teachers were advised to consult a list of 11 Thanksgiving "myths." No. 11 read as follows: "Myth: Thanksgiving is a happy time. Fact: For many Indian people, 'Thanksgiving' is a time of mourning, of remembering how a gift of generosity was rewarded by theft of land and seed corn, extermination of many from disease and gun, and near total destruction of many more from forced assimilation. As currently celebrated in this country, 'Thanksgiving' is a bitter reminder of 500 years of betrayal returned for friendship."

In his new book, The 10 Big Lies About America film critic and radio talk show host Michael Medved recalls the Seattle episode, as well as many other examples of self-flagellation that now characterize many of our national observances. Columbus Day? The start of a vicious subjugation. A Denver Columbus Day parade was marred last year by protesters who threw fake blood and dismembered dolls along the parade route. Plymouth Rock? Weren't the Native Americans here first after all? The 400th anniversary of the landing at Jamestown was renamed from celebration to "commemoration" in 2007 because "so many facets of Jamestown's history are not cause for celebration."

Medved, a passionate but not blind patriot, argues that our kids and the rest of us are being fed a tendentious history that wildly exaggerates the offenses of European settlers. The notion that "America Was Founded on Genocide Against Native Americans" cannot withstand scrutiny.

Like racism, genocide is a word that has lost its meaning through promiscuous overuse. Medved reminds us that the international "Genocide Convention" defines genocide as an act or acts "committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group as such." In the clash of civilizations between European settlers and Native Americans, millions died. But the overwhelming majority of those deaths were attributable to diseases carried involuntarily by Europeans and spread to natives who had no natural immunities to these pathogens. That is a tragedy, but not a crime.

What of those smallpox-infested blankets that have received so much press? Medved examines the evidence and concludes "The endlessly recycled charges of biological warfare rest solely on controversial interpretations of two unconnected and inconclusive incidents 74 years apart." The first was in response to Pontiac's Rebellion (1763), a ferocious small war undertaken by the Great Lakes Indians (who had been allied with the defeated French in the French and Indian War) against British settlements. The Ottawa leader Pontiac told his followers to "exterminate" the whites. They did their best. Hundreds of settlers were tortured, scalped, cannibalized, dismembered, or burned at the stake. As the Indians were besieging Fort Pitt, Field Marshal Lord Jeffery Amherst wrote to a subordinate, "Could it not be contrived to send the Small Pox among the disaffected tribes of Indians?" But nothing seems to have come from this correspondence. The other episode is alleged by fired professor Ward Churchill (yes, the one who invented his Creek and Muscogee heritage and fabricated his academic research), and concerns an outbreak of smallpox among the Mandan tribe in 1837. There is no evidence that the whites intentionally infected the Indians in that case, and considerable evidence that the settlers attempted to prevent the outbreak.

There were terrible injustices and massacres committed by Europeans against Native Americans and some running the other way as well. The more technologically advanced civilization prevailed -- which is the usual course in human affairs. But the current fashion to distort that history into something like a war crime is, to say the least, overstated.

The Thanksgiving story is a strange one to protest. It is recalled, every year, as a time when newly arrived Europeans and Native Americans cooperated and learned from one another and then joined together for a festive meal to celebrate their joint harvest. This week, millions of schoolchildren will don tall paper hats and Indian fringes and feathers. They will recall the peaceful start of the not always peaceful history of the greatest nation on earth. And so they should -- without guilt or shame.

Happy Thanksgiving.

1 comment:

Joanie said...

Chad ~ many great posts regarding homeschooling... It would be so wonderful if more people realized how God really designed our families to incorporate home education/discipleship as an integral part of every day life.

Our home education has not looked typical. We've dealt with illness issues (for myself - the Mom), moved many times, served in ministry together (giving much of our time to the church and serving cross-cultural churches), we've focused on the giftings and talents God blessed each of our children with and spent many hours with mentors/teachers that God provided for each one. Academics are important, but discipleship and a heart after God was always our goal. When academics fell short, God has always been there to fill in the missing pieces (at least according to the world's standards). There have been times when I've been overwhelmed and tired and didn't want to do this anymore - and maybe they would be better off in school - but God has always shown us to keep fighting the good fight, teach our children His Truth, and continue to discuss the world's bent on issues and bring it back to God's Truth. I really appreciate all you've shared recently. The narrow path is not easy to follow, but it is the one with the most blessing (perhaps not here on earth, but for all eternity)! If given a choice to start again, I'd still choose to walk the same road with Jesus...

Your family causes me to stand in awe of how wonderful God is, how He is blessing not only your children/family, but also the children He brings to you. May He open up the heavens and pour forth such blessing that you cannot contain it ~ not for you to hold onto it for your own personal gain, but that your hands would be held open to Him allowing the blessings to not only take care of your family, but also continually flow to others...

We have much to be thankful for!