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Police Arrest 83
Protesters at Denver Columbus Day
Parade
Sunday,
October
07, 2007
DENVER —
Police arrested 83 Columbus Day Parade protesters including American
Indian
Movement activist Russell Means after fake blood and dismembered baby
dolls
were poured on the parade route Saturday.
At
least 10 of those arrested faced
charges of resisting arrest, while most faced charges of blocking a
parade
route or interfering with a peaceful assembly, police spokesman Sonny
Jackson
said. The parade through downtown was delayed about an hour.
George
Vendegnia, one of the
organizers of the parade, said the protest and delay were planned for
and
caused minimal disruption.
"With
this protest, it's just
motivating people more to be back next year and exercise their right to
participate in an American holiday," Vendegnia said.
No
serious injuries were reported to
either protesters or police.
Among
those seen being led away in
handcuffs was Glenn Morris, an associate professor of political science
at the
University of Colorado and one of the organizers of the All
Nations/Four
Directions March, a march in protest of the parade.
Denver's
parade, which was started
in 1907, has a troubled history of arrests and confrontations between
Columbus
supporters and detractors. Protesters have called him a slave trader
who
touched off centuries of genocide and oppression against native people.
Supporters say he was a brave explorer who opened a new world and that
the
parade is an American holiday to be celebrated.
Colorado is credited with being the first to make
Columbus Day a state holiday, which later became a federal holiday. The
parade
is touted as being one of the first in honor of Columbus.
Morris
and other protest march organizers
earlier this week said they were angered with last year's use of
re-enactors of
a 19th century U.S. Army Cavalry unit to carry the flag before the
start of the
Columbus Day Parade. They likened the use of the soldiers, who wore
uniforms
similar to those used during the Indian Wars of the late 1800s, to
nooses used
to intimidate black students in the central Louisiana town of Jena.
Vendegnia
said the re-enactors did
not participate this year because of a scheduling conflict.
83 arrested at Denver Columbus parade
by several
Saturday Oct 6th, 2007 9:21 PM
http://www.transformcolumbusday.org/
DENVER (Reuters) - About 75 protesters, including American Indian
activist
Russell Means, were arrested on Saturday after blocking Denver's
downtown
parade honoring the Italian-born discoverer Christopher Columbus, an
event they
denounced as "a celebration of genocide."
Police loaded protesters onto
buses after they refused orders to disperse. Most will be charged with
obstruction of a roadway or disrupting a lawful assembly, Denver Police
Lt. Ron
Saunier said.
Police delayed the parade's start for more than an hour as they tried
to head
off confrontations.
American Indian groups and their supporters have disrupted the city's
annual
Columbus Day parade every year for nearly two decades, leading to
clashes with
Colorado's Italian-American community over the century-old celebration,
the
longest-running such commemoration in the United States.
Columbus Day, marked this year on October 8, is an official holiday for
most
U.S. federal government workers, many public schools, state and local
agencies
and the U.S. bond market. It recalls the October 12, 1492, landing of
Columbus
in the Americas on his search for a naval route to India, an event that
spawned
an era of European interest in the New World.
Means, talking to Reuters before his arrest, said Columbus was the
"first
trans-Atlantic slave trader" after landing in the Americas in 1492. He
said
Columbus started centuries of oppression of native peoples.
"By all accounts, Christopher Columbus was personally responsible for
thousands of deaths of the original inhabitants of this hemisphere,"
Means
said.
Parade organizer George Vendegnia of the Sons of Italy said his group
would
honor Columbus' legacy until the U.S. Congress changed the holiday's
name. Some
cities including Berkeley, California, have already changed the name to
"Indigenous People's Day."
"It's a day for us to celebrate our heritage," Vendegnia said.
Parade opponent Glenn Spagnuolo, an Italian-American, said Columbus'
legacy
should not be celebrated.
"To honor someone who, by his own writings, was a slave trader, is
immoral," he said. "I don't see any of my Italian culture in
celebrating the occupation and destruction of native cultures.
---------
Glenn Morris
This column explains why Native people should resist Columbus Day, and
why the
rejection of the racist philosophy behind Columbus Day may be the most
important issue facing Indian country today.
In Colorado, we know something about Columbus Day. We have been working
for the
past 18 years to dismantle this anti-Indian celebration. Columbus Day
was born
in Colorado in 1907, the first state to designate the holiday. Over the
past 18
years, we have learned a lot about Columbus Day - its origins, its true
meanings and its importance to U.S. identity and persistent anti-Indian
racism.
As a national holiday, Columbus Day has virtually nothing to do with
honoring
Italian heritage or culture, and it is not about celebrating mutually
held
values of decency, respect or justice. Columbus Day celebrates two
critical
developments integral to the establishment and advancement of the
United
States. First, it celebrates invasion and domination, especially of
indigenous
peoples' territories; second, and much more importantly, it celebrates
the
invention and the legal institutionalization of the ''doctrine of
discovery.''
''Columbus discovered America'' is often euphemized to mean simply that
Columbus was the first European to arrive here. But discovery has been,
since
at least the 15th century, a legal and political term of art used to
rationalize the European theft of Indian territories in the Americas.
In
actuality, what Columbus Day celebrates is the conversion of Columbus'
acts in
1492 to a legal principle, the doctrine of discovery, first outlined in
the
1823 U.S. Supreme Court Johnson v. M'Intosh decision. Johnson was then
used to
legitimize the subordination of Native peoples, and the taking of
nearly 2
billion acres of indigenous territory, by the invading ''civilized,
Christian,
Europeans.''
Johnson v. M'Intosh is the opinion upon which the entirety of federal
Indian
law (and U.S. property law) is constructed. Every destructive opinion
by the
Supreme Court, every destructive policy of Congress or the president to
this
day, is made possible because of Johnson v. M'Intosh.
In Johnson v. M'Intosh, Chief Justice John Marshall outlined the
doctrine of
discovery, writing that ''discovery gave title to the government by
whose
subjects, or by whose authority it was made.'' He also stated that
''discovery
gave exclusive title to those [Europeans] who made it.'' Eastern
Shawnee legal
scholar, Robert Miller, concluded that the doctrine of discovery is the
linchpin that has been consistently used to justify the brutal
territorial
expansion of the United States.
Lumbee law professor Robert Williams Jr. put a fine point on the
importance of
Johnson v. M'Intosh today. Williams calls Johnson v. M'Intosh the most
important Indian law case ever decided; he then stated that Johnson v.
M'Intosh
''has to be considered one of the most thoroughly racist ... decisions
ever
issued by the Supreme Court.'' What really matters today is that
Johnson v.
M'Intosh remains in force. Williams concluded that no one on the
Supreme Court
today ''seems to have the least problem with Johnson v. M'Intosh's
legalized
presumption of Indian racial inferiority, [or] its incorporation into
U.S. law
[the] legal doctrine of conquest and colonization.''
Columbus Day and the Johnson ruling work hand in glove. Johnson v.
M'Intosh was
extended in court decision after court decision, and in the official
19th
century U.S. policy of Manifest Destiny. Manifest Destiny advanced the
idea
that God had given the white race permission to take possession of all
of North
America, while necessarily destroying Native peoples in the process.
Manifest Destiny was declared a success at the 1893 World's Fair in
Chicago,
the first time that Columbus was elevated to national icon status. The
World's
Fair, known also as the Columbian Exposition, was the merger of the
philosophy
and the success of Johnson v. M'Intosh with idea of Columbus as
national poster
boy for U.S. colonialism. Professor Shari Hundorf wrote that ''[b]y
commemorating Columbus' 'discovery' of the Americas in 1492, planners
made
imperial conquest the defining moment of the nation's past [and
future].'''
Columbus Day has become the U.S. holiday that celebrates the
imperialist
redemption of America from Indian ''savagery.'' Johnson v. M'Intosh
becomes the
necessary legal reinforcement to salve the conscience of America for
the theft
of a hemisphere. Columbus Day has become the mask that allows America
to
pretend that it can justify the taking of other peoples' homelands.
Luther
Standing Bear wrote in 1933 that ''The man from Europe is still a
foreigner and
an alien. And he still hates the man who questioned his path across the
continent.'' The United States has created Columbus Day to rationalize
its
historical crimes against indigenous peoples.
If Native people do not challenge the fundamental premise of the
''doctrine of
discovery,'' as celebrated every year through Columbus Day, then the
racist
foundation upon which all federal Indian law and policy is constructed
will
remain intact. We see the ideology of domination carried to this
hemisphere by
Columbus playing out every year all over Indian country. We see it in
the level
of Indian incarceration, in the loss of religious freedom cases, in
Indian
child welfare cases where non-Indian courts ignore the law, in treaty
cases
where the United States ignores international standards, in
international
practice where the United States voted against the adoption of the U.N.
Declaration
on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and in the Cobell trust fund case
where
the United States refuses to account for tens, if not hundreds, of
billions of
dollars that are owed to Individual Indian Money trust accounts.
The removal of Columbus Day will not solve all of the problems in
Indian
country, but it will begin to call into question the legitimacy of the
racist
legal, cultural and political doctrines that continue to deny Native
people
freedom in our own homeland. Just as African-Americans challenged U.S.
segregation in the 1954 case Brown v. Board of Education, Native people
actively and consistently challenging Columbus Day and the doctrine of
discovery should force the United States to answer basic questions
about the
legitimacy of their existence, their identity, their privilege, and the
real
price that Native people continue to pay for the ongoing application of
the
doctrine of discovery.
A popular maxim in Indian country, based on the Iroquoian principle, is
that we
must make decisions based on how they will affect the next seven
generations.
If we do not begin seriously to dismantle the doctrine of discovery,
Columbus
Day and the Columbian legacy, then we will be betraying our
responsibility to
the seventh generation, and we may well be ensuring their destruction.
