Friday 24 May 2019

The Inconvenient Indian: A Curious Account of Native People in North America by Thomas King





Most of us think that history is the past.  It's not.  History is the stories we tell about the past.  That's all it is. Stories.




In 1598, what is now New Mexico, Juan de Onate and his troops killed over eight hundred Acoma and cut off the left foot of every man over the age of twenty-five.




North America has had a long association with Native people, but despite the history that the two groups have shared, North America no longer sees Indians.  What it sees are war bonnets, beaded shirts, fringed deerskin dresses, loincloths, headbands, feathered lances, tomahawks, moccasins, face paint, and bone chokers.




For some Live Indians, being invisible is annoying enough, but being inauthentic is crushing.  If it will help, I'm willing to apologize for the antenna on that house in Acoma.  I've already shaved off my moustache, so that should no longer be an issue.  If I didn't live in the middle of a city, I'd have a horse.  Maybe two.  I sing with a drum group.  I've been to sweats. I have friends on a number of reservations and reserves around North America.  I'm diabetic.  If you can think of something else I can do to help myself, let me know.




For Native people, the distinction between Dead Indians and Live Indians is almost impossible to maintain.  But North America doesn't have this problem.  All it has to do is hold the two Indians up to the light.  Dead Indians are dignified, noble, silent, suitably garbed.  And dead.  Live Indians are invisible, unruly, disappointing.  And breathing.  One is a romantic reminder of a heroic but fictional past.  The other is simply an unpleasant, contemporary surprise. 




A great many people in North America believe that Canada and the United States, in a moment of inexplicable generosity, gave treaty rights to Native people as a gift.  Of course, anyone familiar with the history of Indians in North America knows that Native people paid for every treaty right, and in some cases, paid more than once.




A 1914 [Indian Act] amendment required Legal Indians to get official permission before appearing in Aboriginal costume in any dance, show, exhibition, stampede, or pageant.




Indian-White relations were originally constructed around the concerns of commerce -- the fur trade being a prime example -- and military alliances.  In these matters, Native peoples understood themselves to be sovereign, independent nations, and in early land and treaty negotiations, they were treated as such. 




For 250 years, Whites and Indians had fought as enemies, had fought as allies, had made peace, had broken the peace, and had fought each other again.  But when Great Britain, France, and the newly formed United States sat down in 1783 to hammer out details of the Treaty of Paris that would officially end the American Revolution, Native people, who had fought alongside both England and the colonies, were neither invited to the negotiations nor mentioned in the treaty itself.




Francis Jennings, in his book The Invasion of America, called Christianity a “conquest religion.”  I suspect this description is true of most religions.  I can’t think of one that could be termed a “seduction religion” where converts are lured in by the beauty of the doctrine and the generosity of the practice.  Maybe Buddhism.  Certainly not Christianity.




Missionary work in the New World was war. Christianity, in all its varieties,  has always been a stakeholder in the business of assimilation.




By the late nineteenth century, the Indian Problem was still a problem.  Yes, Indians had been defeated militarily.  Yes, most of the tribes had been safely locked up on reservations and reserves.  Yes, Indians were dying off in satisfying numbers from disease and starvation.  Yes, all of this was encouraging.  But, at the same time, Indians were still being Indians.  How could this happen?




The hope for Native peoples was that, with a little training and a push in the right direction, they would become contributing members of White North America.  This was not to be a compromise between cultures.  It was to be a unilateral surrender.  Indians were to give up what they had and what they believed, in exchange for what Whites had and believed. 




Canada is, according to Canada, a just society. 




In 1850, attendance at residential schools became compulsory for all children from the ages of six to fifteen.  There was no opting out.  Non-compliance by parents was punishable by prison terms.  Children were forcibly removed from their homes and kept at the schools. 




No one knows for sure how many Native children wound up at residential schools in the United States.  Canada reckons their own numbers at about 150,000, so the tally for America would have been considerably higher.  But for the children who did find themselves there, the schools were, in all ways, a death trap.  Children were stripped of their cultures and their languages.  Up to 50 percent of them lost their lives to disease, malnutrition, neglect, and abuse --- 50 percent.  One in two.  If residential schools had been a virulent disease, they would have been in the same category as smallpox and Ebola.  By contrast, the 1918 Spanish flu, which killed millions worldwide, had a mortality rate of only 10 to 20 percent.




Democracy has to be more than two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for dinner.




Thank goodness that the past is the past, and today is today.  We’d much rather be appreciated than hunted, though we do need to understand that each time our new political friends drop by, they will want another and larger piece of our pie, and that they will keep coming back until there is little left but crumbs on a plate.  After all, it’s Indian pie and we don’t need that much.




What remains distressing is that much of what passes for public and political discourse on the future of Native people is a discourse of anger, anger that Native people are still here and still a “problem” for White North America, anger that we have something non-Natives don’t have, anger that after all the years of training, after all the years of having assimilation beaten into us, we still prefer to remain Cree and Comanche, Seminole and Salish, Haida and Hopi, Blackfoot and Bellacoola.




Treaties, after all, were not vehicles for protecting land or even sharing land.  They were vehicles for acquiring land.  Almost without fail, throughout the history of North America, every time Indians signed a treaty with Whites, Indians lost land. 




I know that this sort of rhetoric – “our relationship with the earth” – sounds worn out and corny, but that’s not the fault of Native people.  Phrases such as “Mother Earth”, “in harmony with nature”, and “seven generations” have been kidnapped by White North America and stripped of their power.