Sabelmouse
For years, I opened my 11th-grade U.S. history classes by asking students, “What’s the name of that guy they say discovered America?” A few students might object to the word “discover,” but they all knew the fellow I was talking about. “Christopher Columbus!” several called out in unison.

“Right. So who did he find when he came here?” I asked. Usually, a few students would say, “Indians,” but I asked them to be specific: “Which nationality? What are their names?”

Silence.

In more than 30 years of teaching U.S. history and guest-teaching in others’ classes, I’ve never had a single student say, “Taínos.” How do we explain that? We all know the name of the man who came here from Europe, but none of us knows the name of the people who were here first—and there were hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of them. Why haven’t you heard of them?

This ignorance is an artifact of historical silencing—rendering invisible the lives and stories of entire peoples.

[…] In an interview with Barbara Miner, included in Rethinking Columbus, Suzan Shown Harjo of the Morning Star Institute, who is Creek and Cheyenne, said: “As Native American peoples in this red quarter of Mother Earth, we have no reason to celebrate an invasion that caused the demise of so many of our people, and is still causing destruction today.” After all, Columbus did not merely “discover,” he took over. He kidnapped Taínos, enslaved them—“Let us in the name of the Holy Trinity go on sending all the slaves that can be sold,” Columbus wrote—and “punished” them by ordering that their hands be cut off or that they be chased down by vicious attack dogs, if they failed to deliver the quota of gold that Columbus demanded. One eyewitness accompanying Columbus wrote that it “did them great damage, for a dog is the equal of 10 men against the Indians.”

Corporate textbooks and children’s biographies of Columbus included none of this and were filled with misinformation and distortion. But the deeper problem was the subtext of the Columbus story: it’s OK for big nations to bully small nations, for white people to dominate people of color, to celebrate the colonialists with no attention paid to the perspectives of the colonized, to view history solely from the standpoint of the winners.
reblogged rosaaluxemburgg originally fariyah
6,856 notes
  1. ly-cynical reblogged this from fariyah
  2. truthtrix reblogged this from pourlapaix
  3. freedzokhar reblogged this from pourlapaix
  4. pourlapaix reblogged this from leptiir
  5. intersectionalfeminism reblogged this from fariyah
  6. auset-uhura reblogged this from educationcreateshumanimagination
  7. nanorefarchive reblogged this from minuiko
  8. somethinglikediscoveringtheworld reblogged this from sunshinepatch
  9. nhampton reblogged this from biblio-fem
  10. kelis-curls reblogged this from toned-tanned-fit-andready
  11. niamhbarry1995 reblogged this from everthehero
  12. youronlineresource reblogged this from millennium-fae
  13. silently-screams reblogged this from lickmelahey
  14. roseknowz reblogged this from whatdoesntmakethehistorybooks
  15. whatdoesntmakethehistorybooks reblogged this from kylennn
  16. indistincthappychatter reblogged this from suddenlymeenah
  17. dukes-of-honey reblogged this from sherlock-season-three
  18. suddenlymeenah reblogged this from sherlock-season-three
  19. sherlock-season-three reblogged this from predatorofthedaleksatgallifrey
  20. wantedcosine reblogged this from runawaydragons
  21. prepostasaurus reblogged this from kaelor
  22. leonardj reblogged this from dontstopthefrizz
  23. dontstopthefrizz reblogged this from blogwoodtree
  24. blogwoodtree reblogged this from babyfemmeshark
  25. thespokesman reblogged this from doomburger
  26. doomburger reblogged this from irresistible-revolution
  27. 8thgradeforever reblogged this from undermycamoskirt
  28. undermycamoskirt reblogged this from angelsscream
  29. andjesuswept reblogged this from afro-ninja
  30. evilgiantwolf reblogged this from afro-ninja