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Why I Hate
Thanksgiving
(the Original Version)
by MITCHEL COHEN
with much material contributed by Peter Linebaugh
and others whose names have been lost
The year was 1492. The Taino-Arawak people of the Bahamas discovered Christopher
Columbus on their beach.
In A People's History of the United States, historian Howard Zinn writes
how Arawak men and women, naked, tawny, and full of wonder, emerged from their
villages onto the island's beaches and swam out to get a closer look at the
strange big boat. When Columbus and his sailors came ashore, carrying swords,
speaking oddly, the Arawaks ran to greet them, brought them food, water, gifts.
Columbus later wrote of this in his log. Here is what he wrote:
"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 were well-built, with good bodies and handsome
features. 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 have no iron.
Their spears are made of sugar cane. They would make fine servants. With 50
men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want."
And so the conquest began, and the Thanotocracy "the regime of death"
was inaugurated, for the first time, on the continent the Indians called "Turtle
Island."
You probably already know a good piece of the story: How Columbus's army took
Arawak and Taino people prisoners and insisted that they take him to the source
of their gold, which they used in tiny ornaments in their ears. And how, with
utter contempt and cruelty, Columbus took many more Indians prisoner and put
them aboard the Nina and the Pinta... the Santa Maria having run aground on
the island of Hispañola (today, the Dominican Republic and Haiti). When
some refused to be taken prisoner, they were run through with swords and bled
to death. Then the Nina and the Pinta set sail for the Azores and Spain. During
the long voyage, many of the Indian prisoners died. Here's part of Columbus's
report to Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain:
"The Indians are so naive and so free with their possessions that no one
who has not witnessed them would believe it. When you ask for something they
have, they never say no. To the contrary, they offer to share with anyone."
Columbus concluded his report by asking for a little help from the King and
Queen, and in return he would bring them "as much gold as they need, and
as many slaves as they ask."
Columbus returned to the New World - "new" for Europeans, that is
- with 17 ships and more than 1,200 men. Their aim was clear: Slaves, and gold.
They went from island to island in the Caribbean, taking Indians as captives.
But word spread ahead of them. By the time they got to Fort Navidad on Haiti,
the Taino had risen up and killed all the sailors left behind on the last voyage,
after the sailors had roamed the island in gangs raping women and taking children
and women as slaves. Columbus later wrote: "Let us in the name of the Holy
Trinity go on sending all the slaves that can be sold."
The Indians began fighting back, but were no match for the war technology of
the Spaniard conquerors, even though they greatly outnumbered them. In eight
years, Columbus's men murdered more than 100,000 Indians on Haiti alone. Overall,
dying as slaves in the mines, directly murdered, or dying from diseases brought
to the Caribbean by the Spaniards, over 3 million Indian people were murdered
in the Americas between 1492 and 1508.
What Columbus did to the Arawaks of the Bahamas and the Taino of the Caribbean,
Cortez did to the Aztecs of Mexico, Pizarro to the Incas of Peru, and the English
settlers of Virginia and Massachusetts to the Powhatans and the Pequots. Literally
millions of native peoples were slaughtered. And the gold, slaves and other
resources were used in Europe to spur the growth of the new money economy rising
out of feudalism. Karl Marx would later call this "the primitive accumulation
of capital." These were the violent beginnings of an intricate system of
technology, business, politics and culture that would dominate the world for
the next five centuries.
In the North American English colonies, the pattern was set early. In 1585,
before there was any permanent English settlement in Virginia, Richard Grenville
landed there with seven ships. The Indians he met were hospitable, but when
one of them stole a small silver cup, Grenville sacked and burned the whole
Indian village.
The Jamestown colony was established in Virginia in 1607, inside the territory
of an Indian confederacy, led by the chief, Powhatan. Powhatan watched the English
settle on his people'sland, but did not attack. And the English began starving.
Some of them ran away and joined the Indians, where they would at least be fed.
Indeed, throughout colonial times tens of thousands of indentured servants,
prisoners and slaves - from Wales and Scotland as well as from Africa - ran
away to live in Indian communities, inter-marry, and raise their children there.
In the summer of 1610 the governor of Jamestown colony asked Powhatan to return
the runaways, who were living among the Indians. Powhatan left the choice to
those who ran away, and none wanted to go back. The governor of Jamestown then
sent soldiers to take revenge. They descended on an Indian community, killed
15 or 16 Indians, burned the houses, cut down the corn growing around the village,
took the female leader of the tribe and her children into boats, then ended
up throwing the children overboard and shooting out their brains in the water.
The female leader was later taken off the boat and stabbed to death.
By 1621, the atrocities committed by the English had grown, and word spread
throughout the Indian villages. The Indians fought back, and killed 347 colonists.
From then on it was total war. Not able to enslave the Indians the English aristocracy
decided to exterminate them.
And then the Pilgrims arrived.
When the Pilgrims came to New England they too were coming not to vacant land
but to territory inhabited by tribes of Indians. The story goes that the Pilgrims,
who were Christians of the Puritan sect, were fleeing religious persecution
in Europe. They had fled England and went to Holland, and from there sailed
aboard the Mayflower, where they landed near what is now Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Religious persecution or not, they immediately turned to their religion to rationalize
their persecution of others. They appealed to the Bible, Psalms 2:8: "Ask
of me, and I shall give thee, the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost
parts of the earth for thy possession." To justify their use of force to
take the land, they cited Romans 13:2: "Whosoever therefore resisteth the
power, resisteth the ordinance of God: and they that resist shall receive to
themselves damnation."
The Puritans lived in uneasy truce with the Pequot Indians, who occupied what
is now southern Connecticut and Rhode Island. But they wanted them out of the
way; they wanted their land. And they wanted to establish their rule firmly
over Connecticut settlers in that area.
The way the different Indian peoples lived - communally, consensually, making
decisions through tribal councils - contrasted dramatically with the Puritans,
Christian fundamentalist values. For the Puritans, men decided everything, whereas
in the Iroquois federation of what is now New York state women chose the men
who represented the clans at village and tribal councils; it was the women who
were responsible for deciding on whether or not to go to war. The Christian
idea of male dominance and female subordination was conspicuously absent in
Iroquois society.
There were many other cultural differences: The Iroquois did not use harsh punishment
on children. They did not insist on early weaning or early toilet training,
but gradually allowed children to learn to care for themselves. On the other
hand, the pastor of the Pilgrim colony, John Robinson, advised his parishioners:
"And surely there is in all children a stubbornness, and stoutness of mind
arising from natural pride, which must, in the first place, be broken and beaten
down." The Pilgrims embraced those strict, brutal practices.
Each tribe held to different sexual/marriage relationships; they practiced many
different sexualities, and celebrated them. These ideas repelled the Puritan
hierarchy and attracted some of the European "commoners". Native people
did not believe in ownership of land - that concept was totally alien; they
utilized the land, lived on it. The idea of "ownership" was ridiculous,
absurd. The European Christians, on the other hand, in the spirit of the emerging
capitalism, wanted to own and control everything land, children, sexuality,
and other human beings.
In 1636 an armed expedition left Boston to attack the Narragansett Indians on
Block Island. The English landed and killed some Indians, but the rest hid in
the thick forests of the island and the English went from one deserted village
to the next, destroying crops. Then they sailed back to the mainland and raided
Pequot villages along the coast, destroying crops again.
The English went on setting fire to wigwams in the village. They burned village
after village to the ground. As one of the leading theologians of his day, Dr.
Cotton Mather put it: "No less than 600 Pequot souls were brought down
to hell that day." And Cotton Mather, clutching his bible, spurred the
English to slaughter more Indians in the name of Christianity.
One colonist rationalized the plague that had destroyed the Patuxet people -
a combination of slavery, murder by the colonists and disease brought by the
English - as "the Wonderful Preparation of the Lord Jesus Christ by His
Providence for His People's Abode in the Western World."
The Pilgrims robbed Wampanoag graves for the food that had been buried with
the dead for religious reasons. Whenever the Pilgrims realized they were being
watched, they shot at the Wampanoags and scalped them. Scalping had been unknown
among Native Americans in New England prior to its introduction by the English,
who began the practice by offering the heads of their enemies and later accepted
scalps.
Three hundred thousand Indians were murdered in New England over the next few
years. It was the Puritan elite who wanted the war, a war for land, for gold,
for power. It is important to note that ordinary Englishmen did not want this
war. Often, very often, they refused to fight.
There has always been a strong anti-war movement in the United States and when
some Europeans refused to kill Indians, that was the start of this proud heritage.
Some European intellectuals like Roger Williams spoke out against the genocide.
And some erstwhile colonists joined the Indians and even took up arms against
the invaders from England. In the end, however, the Indian population of 10
million that was in North America when Columbus came was reduced to less than
one million.
"What do you think of Western Civilization?" Mahatma Gandhi was asked
in the 1940s. To which Gandhi replied: "Western Civilization? I think it
would be a good idea." And so enters "Civilization," the civilization
of Christian Europe, a "civilizing force" that couldn't have been
more threatened by the beautiful communal anarchy of the Indians they encountered,
and so they slaughtered them.
These are the Puritans that the Indians "saved", and whom we celebrate
in the holiday, Thanksgiving. Tisquantum, also known as Squanto, was a member
of the Patuxet Indian nation, and Samoset was of the Wabonake Indian nation,
which lived in Maine. They went to Puritan villages and, having learned to speak
English, brought deer meat and beaver skins for the hungry, cold Pilgrims. Tisquantum
stayed with them and helped them survive their first years in their New World.
He taught them how to navigate the waters, fish and cultivate corn and other
vegetables. He pointed out poisonous plants and showed how other plants could
be used as medicines. He also negotiated a peace treaty between the Pilgrims
and Massasoit, head chief of the Wampanoags, a treaty that gave the Pilgrims
everything and the Indians nothing. And even that treaty, like hundreds to follow,
was soon broken.
We learn in school to celebrate this as the First Thanksgiving. A community
college named "Massasoit" today commemorates that indigenous leader
who saved the Pilgrims.
Richard B. Williams, a Lakota Sioux and the executive director of the American
Indian College Fund - a historian, educator and the founder of the Upward Bound
Program at the University of Colorado at Boulder - casts this tale in a very
different light:
"One day in 1605, a young Patuxet Indian boy named Tisquantum and his dog
were out hunting when they spotted a large English merchant ship off the coast
of Plymouth, Mass. Tisquantum, who later became known as Squanto, had no idea
that life as he knew it was about to change forever.
"His role in helping the Pilgrims to survive the harsh New England winter
and celebrate the 'first' Thanksgiving has been much storied as a legend of
happy endings, with the English and the Indians coming together at the same
table in racial harmony. Few people, however, know the story of Squanto's sad
life and the demise of his tribe as a result of its generosity. Each year, as
the nation sits down to a meal that is celebrated by all cultures and races
- the day we know as Thanksgiving - the story of Squanto and the fate of the
Patuxet tribe is a footnote in history that deserves re-examination.
"The day that Capt. George Weymouth anchored off the coast of Massachusetts,
he and his sailors captured Squanto and four other tribesmen and took them back
to England as slaves because Weymouth thought his financial backers "might
like to see" some Indians. Squanto was taken to live with Sir Ferdinando
Gorges, owner of the Plymouth Company. Gorges quickly saw Squanto's value to
his company's exploits in the new world and taught his young charge to speak
English so that his captains could negotiate trade deals with the Indians.
"In 1614, Squanto was brought back to America to act as a guide and interpreter
to assist in the mapping of the New England coast, but was kidnapped along with
27 other Indians and taken to Malaga, Spain, to be sold as slaves for about
$25 a piece. When local priests learned of the fate of the Indians, they took
them from the slave traders, Christianized them and eventually sent them back
to America in 1618.
"But his return home was short-lived. Squanto was recognized by one of
Gorges, captains, was captured a third time and sent back to England as Gorges,
slave. He was later sent back to New England with Thomas Dermer to finish mapping
the coast, after which he was promised his freedom. In 1619, however, upon returning
to his homeland, Squanto learned that his entire tribe had been wiped out by
smallpox contracted from the Europeans two years before. He was the last surviving
member of his tribe.
"In November 1620, the Pilgrims made their now-famous voyage to the coast
of Plymouth, which had previously been the center of Patuxet culture. The next
year, on March 22, 1621, Squanto was sent to negotiate a peace treaty between
the Wampanoag Confederation of tribes and the Pilgrims. We also know that Squanto's
skills as a fisherman and farmer were crucial to the survival of the Pilgrims
that first year - contributions which changed history.
"But in November 1622, Squanto himself would also succumb to smallpox during
a trading expedition to the Massachusetts Indians. The Patuxet, like so many
other tribes, had become extinct.
"Feasts of gratitude and giving thanks have been a part of Indian culture
for thousands of years. In Lakota culture, it's called a Wopila; in Navajo,
it's Hozhoni; in Cherokee, it's Selu i-tse-i; and in Ho Chunk it's Wicawas warocu
sto waroc. Each tribe, each Indian nation, has its own form of Thanksgiving.
But for Indian culture, Thanksgiving doesn't end when the dishes are put away.
It is something we celebrate all year long - at the birth of a baby, a safe
journey, a new home."
My own feeling? The Indians should have left the Pilgrims to their own devices,
even if it meant they would die.
But they couldn'tdo that. Their humanity made them assist other human beings
in need. And for that beautiful, human, loving connection they paid a terrible
price: The genocide of the original inhabitants of Turtle Island, what is now
America.
Thanksgiving, in reality, was the beginning of the longest war in the U.S -
the extermination of the Indigenous peoples. Thanksgiving day was first proclaimed
by the governor of the Massachuesetts Bay Colony in 1637, not to offer thanks
for the Indians saving the Pilgrims - that's yet another re-write of the actual
history - but to commemorate the massacre of 700 indigenous men, women and children
who were celebrating their annual Green Corn Dance in their own house.
Gathered at this place, they were attacked by mercenaries, English and Dutch.
The Pequots were ordered from the building and as they came forth they were
killed with guns, swords, cannons and torches. The rest were burned alive in
the building. The very next day the governor proclaimed a holiday and feast
to "give thanks" for the massacre. For the next 100 years a governor
would ordain a day to honor a bloody victory, thanking god the "battle"
had been won. [For more information, see Where White Men Fear To Tread,
by Russell Means, 1995; and Facing West: The Metaphysics of Indian Hating
and Empire Building, by R. Drinnon, 1990.]
The Maypole
In 1517, 25 years after Columbus first landed in the Bahamas, the English working
class was in the midst of a huge revolt, organized through the guilds. King
Henry VIII had brought to England Lombard bankers from Italy and merchants from
France to undercut wages, lengthen hours, and break the guilds. This alliance
between international finance, national capital and military aristocracy was
in the process of merging into the imperialist nation-state.
The young workers of London took their revenge upon the merchants. A rumor said
the commonality - the vision of communal society that would counter the rich,
the merchants, the industrialists, the nobility and the landowners - would arise
on May Day. The King and Lords got frightened - householders were armed, a curfew
was declared. Two workers didn'thear about the curfew (they missed Dan Rather
on t.v.). They were arrested. The shout went out to mobilize, and 700 workers
stormed the jails, throwing bricks, hot water, stones. The prisoners were freed.
A French capitalist's house was trashed.
Then came the repression: Cannons were fired into the city. Three hundred were
imprisoned, soldiers patrolled the streets, and a proclamation was made that
no women were allowed to meet together, and that all men should "keep their
wives in their houses." The prisoners were brought through the streets
tied in ropes. Some were children. Eleven sets of gallows were set up throughout
the city. Many were hanged. The authorities showed no mercy and exhibited extreme
cruelty.
Thus the dreaded Thanatocracy, the regime of death, was inaugurated in England
in answer to proletarian riot at the beginning of capitalism.
The May Day riots were caused by expropriation (people having been uprooted
from their lands they had used for centuries in common), and by exploitation
(people had no jobs, as the monarchy imported capital). Working class women
- organizers and healers who posed an alternative to patriarchal capitalism
- were burned at the stake as witches. Enclosure, conquest, famine, war and
plague ravaged the people who, in losing their commons, also lost a place to
put the traditional emblem of the Commons - their Maypole.
Suddenly, the Maypole became a symbol of rebellion. In 1550, Parliament ordered
the destruction of Maypoles (just as, during the Vietnam war, the U.S.-backed
junta in Saigon banned the making of all red cloth, for people were sewing it
into the blue, yellow and red flags of the National Liberation Front).
While heretical liberation-theologists of the day were burned at the stake,
the Bible's last book, Revelation, became an anti-authoritarian manual inspirational
to those who would turn the Puritans, world upside down, such as the Family
of Love, the Anabaptists, the Diggers, Levellers, and Ranters. In 1626, Thomas
Morton, who had come over on his own, a boat person, an immigrant, went to Merry
Mount in Quincy Massachusetts and with his Indian friends put up the first Maypole
in America, in contempt of the Puritans. The Puritans destroyed it, and in retaliation
exiled Morton, plagued the Indians, and hanged gay people and Quakers.
In Great Britain, the proletarian insurgency flared in fits and starts throughout
the empire. Oliver Cromwell's Puritan army blazed into Ireland in 1649, slaughtered
3,500 defenders and local citizenry of the town of Drogheda, and confiscated
almost forty percent of indigenous Catholic lands in Ireland, resistributing
them to Protestants born in Britain. The British treatment of the Irish patriots
paralleled the monarchy's regard for the indigenous people of the "New
World".
Although the Puritans were removed from power in England in 1660 with the death
of Cromwell two years before and the ascendance of Charles II to the throne,
the Puritans in the Americas continued their war against the Pequot Indians
while in Britain May Day was abolished altogether, as part of the attempt to
defeat the growing proletarian insurgency.
In the Americas, rebellion was brewing among the colonists. Charles II put down
Bacon's Rebellion with great bloodshed in Virginia, during which both sides
used, abused, and murdered Indians to reinforce their power. The king's emissaries
began the conquest of a new string of colonies in the South.
A century-and-a-half after Morton planted the first Maypole in the British colonies,
another great "troublemaker," the Manchester proletarian Ann Lee,
arrived in the Americas (1774) and founded the communal living, gender-separated
Shakers who praised God in ecstatic dance and, in rejecting marriage and refusing
to procreate, drove the Puritans and other religious zealots up the wall.
The story of the Maypole as a symbol of revolt continued. It crossed cultures
and continued through the ages. In the late 1800s, the Sioux began the Ghost
Dance in a circle, with a large pine tree in the center, which was covered with
strips of cloth of various colors, eagle feathers, stuffed birds, claws, and
horns, all offerings to the Great Spirit. They didn'tcall it a Maypole, but
they danced, just as the English proletarians danced, just as the Shakers, danced,
for the unity of all Indians, the return of the dead, and the expulsion of the
invaders. It might as well have been a Mayday!
Wovoka, a Nevada Paiute, started it. Expropriated, he cut his hair. To buy watermelon
he rode boxcars to work in the Oregon hop fields for small wages, exploited.
The Puget Sound Indians had a new religion - they stopped drinking alcohol,
became entranced, and danced for five days, jerking twitching, calling for their
land back. Wovoka took this back to Nevada: "All Indians must dance, everywhere,
keep on dancing." Soon they were. Porcupine took the dance across the Rockies
to the Sioux. Red Cloud and Sitting Bull advanced the left foot following with
the right, hardly lifting their feet from the ground. The Federal Agents banned
the Ghost Dance. They claimed it was a cause of the last Sioux outbreak, just
as the Puritans had claimed the Maypole dancers had caused the May Day proletarian
riots, just as the Shakers were dancing people into communality and out of Puritanism.
And, just as the American working class was engaging in pitched battles in its
fight for the 8-hour day.
On December 29, 1890 the U.S. Government (with Hotchkiss guns throwing 2 pound
explosive shells, each containing 30 one-half-inch lead balls, at the rate of
50 per minute) massacred more than 300 men, women and children at Wounded Knee.
These same weapons were also turned against striking industrial workers and
their families. As in the Waco holocaust a century later, or the government'sbombing
of MOVE in Philadelphia, the State disclaimed responsibility. The Bureau of
Ethnology sent out James Mooney to investigate. Amid Janet Reno-like tears,
he wrote: "The Indians were responsible for the engagement." Nothing
has changed.
In 1970, the town of Plymouth, Massachusetts held, as it does each year, a Thanksgiving
Ceremony given by the townspeople. There are many speeches for the crowds who
attend. That year - the year of Nixon's secret invasion of Cambodia; the year
4 students were massacred at Kent State and 13 wounded for opposing the war;
the year they tried to electrocute Black Panthers Bobby Seale and Erica Huggins
- the Massachusetts Department of Commerce asked the Wampanoag Indians to select
a speaker to mark the 350th anniversary of the Pilgrims, arrival, and the first
Thanksgiving.
Wamsutta "Frank" James, a leader of the Wampanoags from Massachusetts,
was selected. But before he was allowed to speak he was directed to show a copy
of his speech to the "citizens" in charge of the ceremony. When they
saw what he had written, they would not allow him to read it.
First: the genocide. Then, the suppression of all discussion about it, even
a century later.
Here is a portion of James, speech - one of the most famous "undelivered"
speeches in American history:
"It is with mixed emotion that I stand here to share my thoughts. This
is a time of celebration for you-celebrating an anniversary of a beginning for
the white man in America. A time of looking back, of reflection. It is with
a heavy heart that I look back upon what has happened to my people.
"Massasoit, the great Sachem of the Wampanoag, ......and his people, welcomed
and befriended the settlers of the Plymouth Plantation. Perhaps he did this
because his tribe had been depleted by an epidemic. Or his knowledge of the
harsh oncoming winter was the reason for his peaceful acceptance of these acts.
This action by Massasoit was perhaps our biggest mistake. We, the Wampanoag,
welcomed you the white man, with open arms, little knowing that it was the beginning
of the end; that before 50 years were to pass, the Wampanoag would no longer
be a free people.
"History wants us to believe that the Indian was a savage, illiterate,
uncivilized animal. A history that was written by an organized disciplined people,
to expose us as an unorganized and undisciplined entity. Two distinctly different
cultures met. One thought they must control life; the other believed life was
to be enjoyed, because nature decreed it.
"Our spirit refuses to die. Yesterday we walked the woodland paths and
shady trails. Today we must walk the macadam highways and roads. We are uniting.
We're standing not in our wigwams but in your concrete tent. We stand tall and
proud, and before too many moons pass we'll right the wrongs we have allowed
to happen to us.
"We forfeited our country. Our lands have fallen into the hands of the
aggressor. We have allowed the white man to keep us on our knees. What has happened
cannot be changed, but today we must work towards a more humane America, a more
Indian America, where men and nature once again are important; where the Indian
values of honor, truth and brotherhood prevail.
"You the white man are celebrating an anniversary. We the Wampanoags will
help you celebrate in the concept of a beginning. It was the beginning of a
new life for the Pilgrims. Now 350 years later it is a beginning of a new determination
for the original American: the American Indian."
For the indigenous people of the Americas, Thanksgiving is "the National
Day of Mourning."
What does anyone have to be thankful for in the genocide of the Indians that
this "holyday" commemorates? As we sit with our families on Thanksgiving,
taking the opportunity to get out of work or off the streets and be in a warm
place with people we love, we realize that none of the things we have to be
thankful for have anything at all to do with the Pilgrims or the official (sanitized)
version of American history, and everything to do with the alternative, anarcho-communist
lives the Indian peoples led before they were massacred by the colonists in
the name of Christianity, privatization of property and the lust for gold and
slave labor.
Yes, I am an American. But I am an American in revolt. I am revolted by the
holiday known as Thanksgiving.
I have been accused of wanting to go backwards in time, of being against progress.
To those charges, I plead guilty. I want to go back in time to when people lived
communally, before the colonists, Christian god was brought to these shores
to sanctify their terrorism, their slavery, their hatred of children, their
capitalism, their oppression of women, their holocausts. But that is impossible.
So I look forward to the utter destruction of the apparatus of death known as
Amerika - not the people, not the beautiful land, but the machinery of empire,
the State, capitalism, religious bigotry that in many ways dominates everyday
life, greed, and the lies that enable it to continue, sucking us into being
complicit with this awful history ... as it is repeated today.
I look
forward to a future where I will have children with America, and ... they will
be the new Indians.
Mitchel
Cohen is co-editor of "Green Politix," the national newspaper of the
Greens/Green Party USA.
He can be reached at: mitchelcohen@mindspring.com (I've added several pretty
amazing pictures in the pamphlet
version, so if you'd like me to send them to you as a jpg attachment, please
let me know. And, if you'd like this in pamphlet
form, please send $4 to Mitchel Cohen, 2652 Cropsey Avenue #7H, Brooklyn NY
11214. Thanx.)
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Thanksgiving 2006
Mitchel Cohen is a friend and a tireless
activist in behalf of human, environmental, economic, and
social justice issues. In his essay he makes the very good point that the
genesis of our American
Thanksgiving was to celebrate the massacre of 700 Native Americans in 1637.
While I agree with
Mitchel that this was the beginning of our American Thanksgiving
Holiday, and that we, as Americans,
need to acknowledge our ancestor's horrible actions and most importantly
to discontinue these same
types of actions in modern times in other places, I also believe that a
majority of Americans celebrate
Thanksgiving for the pure intention of being grateful for their lives, their
families, and their blessings.
Thanksgiving celebrations are ancient events pre-dating American history and enjoyed
by many different
nationalities all over the world. I believe that Mitchel is using his provocative
essay to educate, agitate
and incite debate and enlightenment, and I thank him for that. But, Thanksgiving
Celebrations will always
be enjoyed by people for their true meaning and not for our unfortunate and
disgraceful history.
If we want to eliminate an undeserving Holiday, let's get rid of Columbus Day
because Christopher Columbus
was the instrument of a huge amount of Indian death and suffering, stealing
the Native's gold, land and
enslaving tens of thousands. It is non-debatable because it is all written
in his journals. So, I would be in
favor of eliminating Columbus Day... but not Thanksgiving.
Rhio
Nov. 24, 2006
I agree with you about Columbus
Day, and have marched in rather militant protests against it. (I wish the
damn statues of Columbus would be pulled down all over the City, as occurred
in, say, Russia with Stalin's statues.)
And, I agree that Thanksgiving has become a celebration of something other than
its original. The same is
true of every holiday, and workers are grateful for whatever days off we can
get. This raises an interesting
philosophical/historical question, about when does something become something
else, and how should we be active
in making that happen.
Love,
Mitchel
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Guess
Who's Coming to Dinner?
Why I Hate Thanksgiving
(2004 Version)
By MITCHEL COHEN
On Thanksgiving
morning 2003, George W. Bush showed up in Iraq before sunrise for a photo-op,
wearing an Army workout jacket and surrounded by soldiers. He cradled a platter
with what appeared to be a golden-brown turkey. Washington Post reporter Mike
Allen wrote that "the bird looks perfect, with bunches of grapes and other
trimmings completing a Norman Rockwell image that evokes bounty and security
in one of the most dangerous parts of the world."
As the world was soon to learn (but quickly forgot), the turkey platter was
a phony, a decoration, that Bush posed with for the cameras. Bush shook a few
hands, said a few "God Bless Americas," and scurried back to his plane
as quickly as he had arrived.
Thus, in one fell swoop, the new Conquistador had tied to history'sbloody bough
the 511-year-old conquest of the "New World" °© whose legions
smote the indigenous population in the name of Christ °© with last
year'sbombardment and invasion of Iraq and the torture-detentions of prisoners
of war at U.S. military bases.
Since last Thanksgiving George Bush's America has filled the Iraqi landscape
with depleted uranium armaments that have poisoned the agriculture and water
supply for thousands of years to come.
As I write, U.S. troops are blasting their way through the town of Fallujah,
and hundreds of dead civilians lie in the streets everywhere. The military calls
them "corpses" and "collateral damage" - and so too do the
media. U.S. and British journalists have fled the carnage and return only as
"embeds" - reporters planted in the safety of large army squandrons
- embellishing slightly on military press releases and faxing their reports
to their editors as "eyewitness news". It is only through the photos
taken by Arab journalists and independent media that we learn of the actual
horror, of the children's bodies lying in the street alongside the tanks as
American soldiers satisfactorily survey the scene.
The NY Post ran a picture of one of these soldiers and captioned him the "Marlboro
Man," the generic embodiment of what it means for them to be a "man,"
rugged, oil-smeared face dragging on a U.S. cigarette. It's not the individual
grunt's fault that the media needs to invent its heroes in such caricatures,
but forgive me if I look elsewhere - perhaps to the guerrillas, to the hundreds
of military resisters, to the immigrants rounded up for simply existing, to
lawyers like Lynne Stewart who are fighting against the USA Patriot Act and
the decimation of the Bill of Rights - for reminding us of what it means to
be human in an era of robots.
Similarly, in Palestine where Israeli occupiers are building a huge wall - basically,
a concentration camp - around and through Palestine, paid for by U.S. tax dollars.
The mindset that created the first Thanksgiving in the 17th century on the corpses
of murdered Pequot Indians runs free today in the 21st century over the corpses
of murdered Iraqis, Afghanis, and Palestinians.
* * *
In November 2003, as George Bush's plane was landing in the pre-dawn hours for
his faux-dinner in Iraq, I wrote "Why I Hate Thanksgiving," and it
ended up being published all over the place under various titles, such as Counterpunch's"Genocide?
Pass the Turkey." Much has transpired since then. But, despite enormous
antiwar protests that shook the world, the true history of what Thanksgiving
represents, as I discussed in my article, has re-emerged without apology from
the Shopping Malls of suburbia in the form of the Night of the Living Dead.
The elections were stolen, and ignorant armies are clashing everywhere by night.
I received hundreds of letters responding to that essay; In future printings
of this booklet I will append readers, comments, so please send them to me.
In this printing I've supplemented some historical views and made some other
adjustments.
One additional consideration has to do with our fetishization of "Thanksgiving
food," why we eat it, where it comes from. While I fondly remember the
results of Aunt Dora's secret recipe for her delicious turkey stuffing that
I enjoyed so much as a kid, I am revolted by the annual ritual slaughter of
tens of millions of turkeys, which many of us feast on while watching equally
sanitized images of blown-up Iraqi and Afghan children. William Kunstler, bless
his soul - whirling as he is in his grave furiously trying to generate the energy
needed to power all the indymedia websites worldwide - towards the end of his
life began to speak of the link between the mass slaughter of animals, capital
punishment and the history of colonization ... and, what we'd need to do to
begin to change things:
"Marjorie Spiegel, a neighbor of mine in Greenwich Village, has written
a most compelling book - The Dreaded Comparison - in which she details the devastating
similarities between animal and human slavery," Kunstler argues. He continues:
"Alice Walker, in her most eloquent foreword, states that The animals of
the world exist for their own reasons. They were not made for humans any more
than black people were made for whites or women for men...
"We owe it to ourselves and the animal world as well to create, not merely
a body of rules and regulations to govern our conduct but a level of sensibility
that makes us care, deeply and constructively, about the entire planet and all
of its varied inhabitants. If we can accomplish this, then, perhaps, in some
far-off day, those who follow us down the track of the generations will be able
to dwell in relative harmony with all the creatures of the earth, human and
nonhuman."
The ritual slaughter of turkeys; the fact that each American's average Thanksgiving
dinner is 2000 calories, and that we live in a country with 5% of the world's
people consuming 27% of the world's natural resources, while making 50% of its
garbage - these present us with strong arguments against factory farming, with
its subjugation of animals (and plants) to severe abuse, genetic engineering,
pesticides, and a sewer of antibiotics, leading to conditions that not only
torture the animals but enter the U.S. diet and severely impact on human health.
We are getting sicker as a nation physically, as well as mentally. The two are
related.
We know that we need to speak truth to power, and that justice will prevail
eventually; the questions, though, are "How long is eventually?" "How
many people must be tortured and killed in the meantime?" And, "How
can we stop it? What do we need to do, NOW?"
After reading my essay, one writer wrote: "Good Lord, I,m so depressed!
I hope he doesn'twrite Why I Hate Christmas,! His family must really look forward
to his arrival on Thanksgiving Day. For my sanity'ssake I think I,ll cling to
the revisionist version!"
Another writer asked me: "I'vebeen reading your posts for years and I wonder,
is there anything you celebrate and take joy in? We never hear about those things,
but only about what you find wrong with the world. What do you find right?"
I can answer in one word: "Resistance." Celebrate Resistance. That
is what I take joy in, Resistance in its political, artistic, social, and sexual
forms.
* * *
This Thanksgiving Day, I will get together with MY family - those of you who
believe in resistance - and FAST in front of U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer's house
in Park Slope, Brooklyn, to protest his support for the wars against Iraq and
Afghanistan, the U.S. financing of Israel's occupation of Palestine, and the
detention and torture of immigrants and prisoners of war by the U.S. government.
I will fast outside Sen. Schumer's in order to meditate upon the historical
threads that bind U.S. policy today to its colonial genocide of the Native people
of Turtle Island.
I will fast for Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and all political prisoners
in the United States.
I will fast against the USA Patriot Act, repression of immigrants, and the decimation
of the Bill of rights.
I will fast against global ecological devastation.
I will fast to better contemplate what new forms the resistance will take.
The effort in finding ways to turn despair into resistance is a happy one. CREATE
the alternative. BE the alternative. Don't let the system determine for us how
to experience its rituals and warfare, or the approved ways to combat its terror.
Be Creative. Resistance keeps you young, forever!
Mitchel Cohen
Bensonhurst, Brooklyn
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