Native Americans Celebrate Heritage

Indigenous Peoples Day events honor ancestors on a day that was named for Columbus
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 9, 2023 5:55 PM CDT
Events Celebrate Indigenous Peoples Day
People attend an Indigenous People Sunrise ceremony at Bde Maka Ska Lake in Minneapolis, Minn., on Monday.   (Kerem Y?cel/Minnesota Public Radio via AP)

Native Americans celebrated their history on Monday with events marking Indigenous Peoples Day, from a sunrise gathering in Minneapolis to a rally at the Maine Statehouse and traditional dancing, music, and food in Arizona and Alaska. The ceremonies, costumed performers and speeches came two years after President Biden officially commemorated Indigenous Peoples Day, the AP reports. At the time, he said the day is meant to "honor America's first inhabitants and the Tribal Nations that continue to thrive." At a gathering in Phoenix where dancers performed in traditional Aztec costumes, Sifa Matafahi said it was an opportunity to "pay respect to indigenous cultures ... to reflect on our past and history while also acknowledging our cultural presence."

In Minnesota, about 150 people, including the governor, attended a sunrise prayer and ceremony at Bde Maka Ska, a lake surrounded by parkland on the south side of Minneapolis. "Today, we recognize our ancestors and predecessors who really laid the foundation for us to stand," said Thorne LaPointe, a Native American organizer. "And we will always recognize our elders who are here and those who have gone on before us, who really kicked open the doors in their time, nationally and internationally." Seventeen states and Washington, DC, have holidays honoring Native Americans, according to the Pew Research Center. Many of them celebrate it on the second Monday of October, pivoting from a day long rooted in the celebration of explorer Christopher Columbus to one focused on the people whose lives and culture were forever changed by colonialism.

Dozens of cities and school systems also observe Indigenous Peoples Day. In Augusta, Maine, several hundred people rallied outside the Statehouse in support of a Nov. 7 statewide vote on an amendment that would require the restoration of tribal treaties that were omitted from printed versions of the state constitution. Maulian Bryant, Penobscot Nation ambassador and president of the Wabanaki Alliance, said once people understand the importance to Native Americans, they will support it like they did when towns, and then the state, enacted Indigenous Peoples Day. Bryant recalled the successful grassroots conversations that took place about the legacy of Columbus, whose arrival brought violence, disease, and suffering to Native Americans. "We want to honor the true stewards of these lands," she said.

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Some gathered in Anchorage, Alaska, said such a celebration would have been unheard of there six decades ago. Gina Ondola, a Dena'ina Athabascan, said she graduated from East Anchorage High School in 1962 with only four or five other Alaska Natives in her class and certainly no Indigenous culture club for Native students. "We didn't learn much about our history," she said, per the AP. Instead they were taught how white Europeans who came to North America were slaughtered by Native Americans. "When I was growing up, I didn't feel too much pride in being Native. I always heard about 'drunk Natives,'" said Odola. "It feels good for me to be able to feel pride in who I am."

(More Indigenous People's Day stories.)

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