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Caroline
Caroline has a PhD in religion and studies Mormon women.

Our Bloggers Recommend: “The History of Thanksgiving from the Native American Perspective”

November is Native American Heritage Month. As Thanksgiving approaches, I’ve been wondering how Native Americans feel about this holiday, so I was grateful to read the article, “The History of Thanksgiving from the Native American Perspective,” from Native Hope. The author writes that Native Americans have a variety of approaches and feelings toward the holiday, from commemorating the fourth Thursday of November as the National Day of Mourning for Native Americans, to embracing the positive messages of the holiday and using it as a time to gather, give thanks, and celebrate the harvest.

As the author writes, Thanksgiving and Native American Heritage Day (the day after Thanksgiving) “allow us to reflect on our collective history and celebrate the beauty, strength, and resilience of the Native tribes of North America. We remember the generosity of the Wampanoag tribe to the European settlers. We remember the hundreds of thousands of Native Americans who lost their lives because of the ignorance and greed of colonists and the genocide experienced by whole tribes. We remember the vibrant and resilient Native descendants, families, and communities that persist to this day throughout the culture and the country.”

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Caroline has a PhD in religion and studies Mormon women.

2 Responses

  1. That was a great article. Our lives as Americans on the North American continent is so complicated. We grow up loving a holiday, then learn its real source and meaning for others. The cognitive dissonance and desire to ignore that is what I think has led to strong political divides. Do we reject all we love, ignore the pain of others, or find a mutually beneficial middle ground? Of course the last of finding middle ground would be ideal. It’s so much work to get there. Good work, but hard.

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Year after year I have watched a pattern of behavior emerge among my local community of Latter-day Saints. It is to invite the most convenient Native American to offer either the opening or closing prayer for our Sacrament Meetings on or around both the 4th and the 24th of July. In an attempt to make everyone feel included, ward leaders fail to understand the complex emotions that this simple request creates among those of us still suffering from the effects of colonization. Such efforts at inclusion are not the kindness they are thought to be, but rather, are opportunities for the dominant culture to receive a confirmation that all the deprivations of the past are now long forgotten and forgiven. Nothing could be further from the truth.

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