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God's Politics

Why Celebrate Columbus Day?

by Randy Woodley 10-12-2009

From the journal of Christopher Columbus:

In all the world, there is no better people nor better country. They love their neighbors as themselves, and they have the sweetest talk in the world, and are gentle and are always laughing.

They… brought us parrots and balls of cotton and spears and many other things, which they exchanged for the glass beads and hawks’ bells. They willingly traded everything they owned … They do not bear arms, and do not know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut themselves out of ignorance … They would make fine servants … With fifty men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want.

As an explorer, Columbus was not the first to reach the Western Hemisphere. Native Americans had been here for 10,000-20,000 years, and Vikings and Chinese are among those others who hold prior claims. Even after four attempts, Columbus never realized his goal of finding a western ocean route to Asia. As a “founding father type figure” he never set foot in what is now considered America but landed in the present day Bahamas, Cuba, and Haiti. As a Christian example he enacted terrible cruelties to friendly natives: assuming unlawful rights of authority; robbing and subjugating whole nations of their freedom and entire capital; allowing his men to rape, murder and pillage at will; and deliberately leading the way for the genocide of millions, considered by many to be the worst demographic catastrophe in recorded history.

So why do Americans celebrate Columbus Day?

Perhaps it is because this holiday is foundational to establishing the American myth that Western European exploration, technology, science, governance, religion, etc. are all superior to the cultural contributions of the rest of the world — but that is just not true.

For example, prior to European contact, great civilizations thrived in America with unparalleled techniques in urban planning, micro-agriculture, macro-enviromental management (including ecology, xeriscape, agronomy, botany, forestry, and raised bed, naturally fertilized gardening), sustainable architecture (including passive solar heating), psychology, philosophy, religion, ethics, science, math, medicine (including brain surgery and dentistry), government, language, education, rhetoric, intercontinental economic trade, successful peacemaking, etc. Most Americans have little correct knowledge of Ancient American civilizations.

If you think large cities are a mark of ascendancy (and I don’t), then consider the fact that Cahokia (East St. Louis) was one of the largest urban centers in the world in its day, (apex circa 1200 A.D.). The city of Cahokia had in excess of 15,000 residents with numerous suburbs and agricultural centers creating a total urban population of more than 40,000 residents. It was only surpassed in size in America in 1800 C.E. by Philadelphia, PA.

The point is not whose “stuff” is the best but rather why can’t we celebrate it all without pulling from despicable despots of the past like Columbus? Euro-Americans landed in America. The accomplishments of the people who were here prior to their arrival should be celebrated and memorialized along with those who came here later. If Woody Guthrie was right, “this land was made for you and me.” Why can’t we share it together? This includes all of our history and all of our accomplishments. We have begun to do this with other ethnic groups. For example, many non-African Americans are now proud to celebrate the fame of Jackie Robinson. American sports fans everywhere take pride in Robinson’s entrance into a formerly segregated sport — which led the way for other African-American athletes.

When Americans continue to celebrate Columbus Day we do damage — not just to Native America but to all Americans. Jews will never celebrate the rise of the Third Reich. Ugandans will not likely hail the legacy of Idi Amin, Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge Regime, et. al. This Columbus Day, let’s see Columbus for what he was and begin to celebrate new legacies of the past that better represent where we want to be as an America of the future. Maybe by next year we will be officially celebrating a pre-Columbus day!

Randy WoodleyRev. Dr. Randy Woodley is a Keetoowah Cherokee Indian descendent and the author of  Living in Color: Embracing God’s Passion for Ethnic Diversity. He teaches history, theology, and culture at George Fox Evangelical Seminary in Portland, Oregon.

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  • Thanks so much for the shattering critique, Randy. I think we should all boycott Columbus Day until it is officially removed from the national calendar. What a shame for this country!
  • compassion4
    This journal entry awoke me in 2000 to the lies I had been taught in school, within a book entitled Lies My Teacher Told Me by James Lowen. Thank goodness I know now to tell and educate my children about these things.
  • jesse3
    Can I just point out that for the past couple of years, at least, Sojo has used several national holidays as occasions for criticizing the US and Americans. Seriously. This has happened for Columbus Day. Veterans Day. Independence Day. And I'm almost certain it also happened for Christmas and Thanksgiving.

    Mind you, I don't really care...but you guys can be downers!
  • canucklehead
    Watch out, Grandparents Day!
  • Joe_Allen_Doty
    I just got through watching "Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader" on a local affiliate of the MNT TV network.

    A lady contestant was asked, "What next holiday comes after Flag Day?"

    She didn't answer with "Independence Day." She said, "The 4th of July."

    Well, on the calendars of every county where the primary spoken language is English, there is a 4th of July. The name of the holiday is "Independence Day." It is NOT the 4th of July.

    In reality, "Flag day" is not really a Federal Holiday. The Federal Holiday before Independence Day is Memorial Day.

    I am a US Army Veteran and a Vietnam Conflict Veteran (it was not a war). "Veterans' Day" was originally "Armistice Day" to celebrate the end of World War I.
  • greenearth
    Columbus opened up a legacy of oppression and genocide against the Native Americans. Believe me, this IS a downer!
  • Joe_Allen_Doty
    Thanksgiving Day should be celebrated at the time of the year when the main harvest takes place.

    The Cherokees and other tribes celebrated their "Green Corn Festival" and that was when the corn on the cob was sweet and just perfectly right to eat. That was actually a Thanksgiving Holiday Period and it was not in November.
  • Joe_Allen_Doty
    Canadians celebrate today as "Thanksgiving Day." That makes more sense to me.

    According to some internet information, Columbus' 3rd voyage took him to the coast of South America and his 4th voyage took him to Central America which is on the North American Continent.
  • canucklehead
    You're right, Joe, and as I munch my third piece of pumpkin pie today, I find myself giving thanks that retailing breathes meaning into Thanksgiving Day.
  • letjusticerolldown
    OK. Let me jump over to the New York Times website and just catch their lead headline at the moment. Pause...........

    "U.S. Can’t Trace Foreign Visitors on Expired Visas" NYT

    "United States," "Foreign," "Visas,"................

    These are loaded terms. They are laden with a historical narrative of the nation and the world. Who belongs. Who doesn't belong. etc. etc.

    Our ability to converse is laden with culture. The fact Randy writes in English is admission to a dominant, exploitive, conquering culture. Or is it due to a world that loves and desires benefits developed by English culture???

    Just as our conversation and today's events must be couched in a cultural context, laden with all kinds of understandings--so too is every historical narrative.

    Randy's narrative could as easily focus on the cruelties, oppressions, and evils of "indiginous peoples." The concept of "indiginous people" rests on a notion that there was some pristine moment of human history in which the people that were supposed to rightly inhabit Hispaniola resided there free of disease, sin and conflict. Everything since then was corruption.

    I think we ought reflect on places like Palestine and consider how long and deeply we want to debate alternative historical narratives.

    For the moment--I side with Randy. But I become suspicious when language that is presented as an appeal for a corrected narrative begins to sound as a desire to simply establish a new dogma.

    Christopher Columbus has a certain stature in our cultural narrative--and we frame him in different ways. The explorations were significant with significant consequences.

    I think the 'invisibility' of indiginous peoples in our overall narrative is profoundly wrong--factually and as a matter of perspectives and values.

    The day does not need to be one of treating him as saintly hero or demonic enemy. What I see unfolding (and is what I fear) is simply another opportunity to wage a new war of historical frameworks. And the victim becomes any attempt to simply be a bit more honest and complete. It becomes a fight.

    Dr MLK was killed 41 years ago. As far as I can tell, the public narrative about who this man was, and what he did (and a whole movement), continues to evolve. And it does not evolve towards a better, more complete, more appreciative understanding--even though we have tens of millions in the nation who remember him.

    We still, in these United States, have many nations, many broken treaties, and much unfinished business in being a nation that lives out its promise instead of its curse. We have choices to make today. Simple honesty about the world Columbus bumped into would be wonderful. We don't need a political fight over whether the day should be--as if we could take care of our business by obliterating our memory of a twisted memory.
  • NMRod
    It's hard to be a Native American on Columbus Day: everyone else can look to ancestry from their mother country. The English, to England, the Irish, to Ireland, the Germans, to Germany; and a hundred other original nationalities and nations. Even Jewish folk can now look to Israel.

    All of those often on Columbus Day celebrate the conquest of North America; and for those, it can often have a religious and patriotic cast: the Pilgrims and Puritans, setting "God's City" upon a "hill" - the pre-eminent and dominating high ground from which all the world is now ruled, according to Manifest Destiny.

    It's another thing to be an American Indian; to be a conquered people, shrunken to reservations originally set up to be concentration camps for those slated for extinction.

    It's demoralizing to be an American Indian man; America's troops roam the globe and there's no serious chance that they will actually ever need to defend the "homeland" from any of their far-flung foes conquering it or taking it over the way that American Indians had it done to them.

    But American Indian men cannot defend their lost nation. No wonder that so many submerge this into becoming the ethnic minority with the greatest participation in America's armed forces: if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. In this way the sense of failure at being unable to defend one's people is sublimated.

    Yet everyone is God's child. The prescription for having suffered victimization is not to victimize in turn, even in one's heart or wishes.
    The victim is superior to the oppressor, until he takes up bitterness. Evil is not conquered with thoughts of evil.

    What would God have us do, by the example of Jesus?

    Americans who've profited from this oppression need forgiveness. They will never be whole until they realize what truly happened and how contrary to God's will it has been. For this to occur, they need to be confronted with the loving forgiveness of those oppressed, with it clearly stated what they are being forgiven for.

    Many Americans are now suffering personally - financially, spiritually and in personal sacrifice in endless battles - for the wrongs that have been done. The inevitability of the consequences for what has been done that's wrong, multiply as the same errors continue, writ larger and larger. Not realizing fully what has been done, many Americans have taken the wrong lessons as to how to proceed in the future, and we compound error upon error.

    America needs to listen to its American Indian voices. It needs to hear and heed their voices of forgiveness.

    For it is a rare and unusual native people Americans have in their midst - a forgiving and loving people, who can model the behavior Jesus wants us all to show to each other.
  • Randy,
    As always, I appreciate your perspective and wisdom. Enjoy your radio spot! That should be a kick!
  • honduranhero
    Hispanics call this day, "El Día de la Raza." We take pride in it, since it was the day when our race was born. We are a mixture of African, European, and Native peoples. It used to be considered a sign of inferiority, but we now own the "Mestizo" and "Mulato" identity. Once a symbol of pain, we consider ourselves to be "the Cosmic Race."
    I have a lot of indigenous heritage (i.e. I can't grow facial hair), so I understand the pain of colonialism and racism; however, for Hispanics it has become a day to celebrate because we now own the mixing of the races.
  • NMRod
    Watch out - this might be the "unwarranted" pride proviso that Andy Schlafly's The Conservative Bible Project wanted to rework about the scriptural injunction against pride in his rewrite of the King James Version Bible! Of course, his idea was to make pride in country and military service - and gasp, maybe in even being anglo-European - acceptable in his particular tribal God's eyes.

    I could get into the idea that we should all celebrate one another as God's gifts to each other though - to put it to the test, how do Michael Moore, Rush Limbaugh, Minister Farrakhan and Al Franken sound for starters? I won't mention some others until we can come to love even those first!
  • RadicalChristianLibrarian
    Ugh. I guess I do have to love Rush Limbaugh, even if he makes it really, really, really hard. But I guess that's the whole point of being a Christian- loving those who aren't so lovable. Jesus said that even non-believers love their friends and that we must make ourselves distinct and separate from the rest of the world by loving our enemies.

    I'll start praying for Rush too. And don't worry, I'm not "adopting a conservative."
  • cvboy777
    However, some Latinos like myself have a hard time buying into "La Raza Cosmica" (The Cosmic Race). In Mexico, Jose Vasconcelos pushed this very idea to give the country a sense of ethnic identity and while I consider his intentions to be sincere and hopeful, he romanticized and glorified the fusion of cultures while overshadowing the ignominious histories of Spanish/European arrival to the Americas. Many in Mexico have adopted the Mestizo tagline, but through various echelons of society and government, oppression of indigenous peoples in the Americas and worldwide still persists. Those who identify with indigenous groups don't always fit the bill for the "Cosmic Race" to this day. The divide is clearly demarcated that some "mestizos" (albeit appear the same in physical characteristics) will even call those who represent their ancestry "indios" (literally indian but carries a derogatory connotation). A fact that that is evident and even visible if you spend enough time in any of the Americas. Either way, I'm proud of my ethnic identity (Mexican born in the U.S.) and all that has been offered to me through my culture(s) which I embrace but I am not ignorant to sins of the past which lend pain to those who still strongly identify with their roots. For that reason alone I don't celebrate Columbus Day. We really need to embrace truth and love over pride and lies. Blessings!

    Saludos,
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