11/27/13

The True Origins of Thanksgiving

I spent one year in Girl Scouts.  During that year, I was afforded the opportunity to play an American Indian in a play.  I was totally excited about it until I found out I was to play a squaw.  My past life had been an Indian chief, and a squaw was so beneath me, or so I thought at the time.

My ideas about being a squaw have changed from that time, but the honor I hold for the American Indians has not.  This blog is about truth, so when I thought to make a post about Thanksgiving, I had to take my brothers and sisters into account.  As I've discussed with another native named Spider Cloud, the white man has lied.  Not only about the history of Jesus, the killing of the Jews or the captivity of slaves, but also about the story of Thanksgiving itself.  I cannot help but know what they must feel every Thanksgiving when the Americans celebrate this holiday.  For their history is quite different than the history portrayed and fed to us in the mainstream.

Below is the account of Thanksgiving as told by a Native American:


Mistakes, Lies & Misconceptions 
about American Indian people

The Thanksgiving Myth 
(Written by John Two-Hawks)



Let me begin by stating that thousands of years before the 'official' 
Thanksgiving Day was proclaimed by Governor Winthrop of the 
Massachussetts Bay Colony in 1637, North American Indigenous 
people across the continent had celebrated seasons of Thanksgiving. 
'Thanksgiving' is a very ancient concept to American Indian nations. 
The big problem with the American Thanksgiving holiday is its false 
association with American Indian people. The infamous 'Indians and 
pilgrims' myth. It is good to celebrate Thanksgiving, to be thankful 
for your blessings. It is not good to distort history, to falsely portray 
the origin of this holiday and lie about the truth of its actual inception. 
Here are some accurate historical facts about the true origin of this 
American holiday that may interest you.........................................

'Thanksgiving' did not begin as a great loving relationship between the 
pilgrims and the Wampanoag, Pequot and Narragansett people. In fact, 
in October of 1621 when the 'pilgrim' survivors of their first winter in 
Turtle Island sat down to share the first unofficial 'Thanksgiving' meal, 
the Indians who were there were not even invited! There was no turkey, 
squash, cranberry sauce or pumpkin pie. A few days before this alleged 
feast took place, a company of 'pilgrims' led by Miles Standish actively 
sought the head of a local Indian leader, and an 11 foot high wall was 
erected around the entire Plymouth settlement for the very purpose of 
keeping Indians out! Officially, the holiday we know as 'Thanksgiving' 
actually came into existence in the year 1637. Governor Winthrop of the
Massachussetts Bay Colony proclaimed this first official day of Thanksgiving 
and feasting to celebrate the return of the colony's men who had arrived 
safely from what is now Mystic, Connecticut. They had gone there to 
participate in the massacre of over 700 Pequot men, women and children, 
and Mr. Winthrop decided to dedicate an official day of thanksgiving 
complete with a feast to 'give thanks' for their great 'victory'....

As hard as it may be to conceive, this is the actual origin of our current 
Thanksgiving Day holiday. Many American Indian people these days do 
not observe this holiday, for obvious reasons. I see nothing wrong with 
gathering with family to give thanks to our Creator for our blessings and 
sharing a meal. I do, however, hope that Americans as a whole will one 
day acknowledge the true origin of this holiday, and remember the pain, 
loss, and agony of the Indigenous people who suffered at the hands of 
the so-called 'pilgrims'. It is my hope that children's plays about 'the 
first Thanksgiving', complete with Indians and pilgrims chumming at 
the dinner table, will someday be a thing of the past. Why perpetuate 
a lie? Let us face the truths of the past, and give thanks that we are 
learning to love one another for the rich human diversity we share.

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