Title: WS 43105310 Class notes
1WS 4310/5310Class notes
2Our place here at TTU
- In The Problem of Being Indian One
Mixed-Bloods Dilemna, Janice Gould reminds us
that there is not a university in this country
that is not built on what was once native land.
We should reflect on this over and over, and
understand this fact as one fundamental point
about the relationship of Indians to academia
(81-82).
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5 Comanche Nation College
- TTUs 47th pathway agreement
6Comanche Nation of Okla.
- The Comanche Nation, located in Southwest
Oklahoma, has approximately 13,806 enrolled
tribal members. We are striving to keep our
ancestors traditions alive in the Twenty-First
century. - http//www.comanchenation.com/Education/history.ht
ml
7For small group discussion
- What did you learn about Native peoples in
elementary and secondary school? - What have you learned at TTU?
- What are the images of Native people,
particularly Native women, we see on tv, in
movies, in commercials, etc.?
8Brief review of colonization
- What are the periods Daly lays out in her article
and what are the major U.S. policies impacting
Native peoples in those periods?
9The Indian Residential School System
- In both the U.S. and Canada, Native children were
taken from their homes and their communities and
placed in boarding schools. - The idea was to save the children by
assimilating them into the dominant culture.
10David Adams Education for Extinction American
Indians and the Boarding School Experience,
1875-1928.
- Established for the sole purpose of severing the
childs cultural and psychological connection to
his native heritage, this unique institution
figured prominently in the federal governments
desire to find a solution to the Indian
problem, a method of saving Indians by
destroying them (x - xi).
11Carlisle Indian School
- Col. Pratt opened his own school in old Army
barracks at Carlisle, PA, Nov 1, 1879 - 60 boys and 24 girls from Rosebud and Pine Ridge
reservations in Dakota Territory
12Chiricahua Apaches, 1886
- Arriving at Carlisle 4 months later
13Students at Carlisle
14Pratts philosophy
- Kill the Indian, save the child
- In Indian civilization, I am a Baptist, because
I believe in immersing the Indians in our
civilization and when we get them under, holding
them there until they are thoroughly soaked -
1883
15And the Indians got soaked
- Off-reservation schools opened at
- Chemewa, Oregon 1880
- Chilocco, Oklahoma 1884
- Genoa, Nebraska 1884
- Albuquerque, NM 1884
- Lawrence, KS 1884
- Grand Junction, CO 1886
16- Santa Fe, NM 1890
- Fort Mojave, AZ 1890
- Carson, Nevada 1890
- Pierre, SD 1891
- Phoenix, AZ 1891
- Fort Lewis, CO 1892
- Fort Shaw, MT 1892
17- Flandreau, SD 1893
- Pipestone, MN 1893
- Mount Pleasant, MI 1893
- Tomah, WI 1893
- Wittenberg, WI 1893
- Perris, CA 1893
- Greenville, CA 1895
18- Morris, MN 1897
- Chamberlain, SD 1898
- Fort Bidwell, CA 1898
- Rapid City, SD 1898
- Riverside, CA 1902
19Indian Residential Schoolsin Canada
20In both the United States and Canada
- children died in great numbers from disease,
accidents, and neglect - the discipline was harsh
- the food was usually poor and never sufficient,
- many children suffered cultural, emotional,
physical, and sexual abuses
21Johnstons account of work at residential school
- ploughed, seeded and harvested potatoes, beans
and other produce milled the wheat and corn and
baked the bread forged the shoes and shod the
horses mixed the paints and painted the
buildings measured planks and repaired floors
cut the hides and made shoes
22- cut the bolts of textiles and tailored shirts and
pants and pyjamas fed and tended cows, horses,
sheep and swine and even slaughtered them and
swept, dusted and polished floors and furniture
(26). - As he notes, there was little in the entire
institution that was not done by the inmates
(26).
23Testimony of Emily Rice
- Emily Rice was raised on one of the Gulf Islands
of British Columbia and spoke little English
when, at the age of 8, she and her sister Rose,
age 11, were taken from their Gulf Island home by
a priest to attend residential school
24- I clung to Rose until Father Jackson wrenched her
out of my arms. . . . I searched all over the
boat for Rose. Finally I climbed up to the
wheelhouse and opened the door and there was
Father Jackson, on top of my sister. My sisters
dress was pulled up and his pants were down. I
was too little to know about sex but I know now
he was raping her.
25- He cursed and came after me, he picked up his big
black Bible and slapped me across the face and on
the top of the head. I started crying
hysterically and he threw me out onto the deck.
When we got to Kuper Island, my sister and I were
separated. They wouldnt let me comfort her.
(47)
26- Rice also describes her treatment by a nun,
Sister Mary Margaret, who was angry with her for
resisting the nuns advances She took a big
stick with bark on it, and rammed it right inside
my vagina. . . . She told me to say Id fallen on
the stick and that she was just trying to get it
out (48).
27- Rice in later years had to have reconstructive
vaginal surgery and also suffered permanent
hearing loss from beatings received at the
residential school
28Impact on Native language use
- In the words of residential school survivors
29- In wanting to replace Indian ways with white
ways, the top priority was to teach the Native
students English. - Learning to speak, read, and write English would
civilize the savages and change their thought
patterns.
30In the residential schools
- Children were forbidden to speak their native
languages - Musqueam Nation former chief George Guerin gives
his own testimony about his experiences at Kuper
Island Residential School (British Columbia,
Canada)
31George Guerin
- Sister Marie Baptiste had a supply of sticks as
long and thick as pool cues. When she heard me
speak my language, shed lift up her hands and
bring the stick down on me. Ive still got bumps
and scars on my hands. I have to wear special
gloves because the weather really hurts my hands.
32George Guerin
- I tried very hard not to cry when I was being
beaten and I can still just turn off my feelings.
I still understand my language 150 per cent, but
I cannot speak it. Ive even seen a psychologist
to find out why I cant voice those words any
more.
33- And Im lucky. Many of the men my age, they
either didnt make it, committed suicide or died
violent deaths, or alcohol got them. And it
wasnt just my generation. My grandmother, whos
in her late nineties, to this day its too
painful for her to talk about what happened to
her at the school. (61-62)
34They could not use their Native names
- When a nun asks Seepeetza her name, she answers,
my name is Seepeetza. Then she got really made
like I did something terrible. She said never to
say that word again (18). - We dont use our Indian names much. My parents
know we would get in trouble at school if we used
them there (78).
35Children used their languages in secret
- That Indian children used their Native languages
in secret can be seen as a site of resistance. - As Neal McLeod (Cree) reminds us, Every time a
story is told, every time one word of an
Indigenous language is spoken, we are resisting
the destruction of our collective memory (31).
36In Seepeetza RevisitedSterling asks
- In a system which separated families, how did a
child gain a sense of her cultural identity or
family role? - How did total, blind obedience prepare a child
for a life in any society outside of a military
one?
37- how such a system is supposed to prepare a child
for citizenship in a society from which she is
removed? - How does a silenced group learn to voice opinion
and guard democracy when blind obedience and
prison-like conditions prevail?
38- Most importantly, who stands to benefit from the
assimilation of First Nations children? - How does the present education system contribute
to on-going colonialist initiatives? - How can we best combat the type of racist
thinking which put together the residential
schools? (12-13)
39Importance of understanding the IRS experience
today
- Native authors writing today inherit a legacy
marked by the ideology and practices of the
boarding schools. - Their own experiences and understandings of
colonization, oppression, and resistance are
marked by this legacy.
40- The abilities of indigenous peoples to speak
their tribal languages are marked by the
experiences of the generations sent to
residential schools. - Understanding the history, ideology, and legacy
of the residential school system enriches our
understanding of tribal communities and issues
today.
41Works cited
- Sterling, Shirley. My Name is Seepeetza.
Toronto Groundwood Books, 1992. - ---. Seepeetza Revisited An Introduction to
Six Voices. Centre for the Study of Curriculum
and Instruction, UBC. http//ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/pub
lication/insights/online/v03n01/sterling.html
4/29/2005.
42- Fournier, Suzanne Ernie Crey. Stolen From Our
Embrace The Abduction of First Nations Children
and the Restoration of Aboriginal Communities.
Vancouver Toronto Douglas McIntyre 1997. - Johnston, Basil H. Indian School Days. Toronto
Key Porter Books, 1988.
43- In what ways does the ideology behind the Indian
residential school system continue in the
policies of child welfare systems, Indian
education, etc.?
44Discuss words of
- Paula Gunn Allen (76)
- Elizabeth Cook-Lynn (76)
- Linda Hogan (77)
- Carol Sanchez (77)
- Rayna Green (77)
45Paula Gunn Allen
- What does a feminist
- perspective bring to Native Studies?
- What does she say about the oral tradition?
- What can we learn from the different readings of
the Yellow Woman story?
46Winona LaDuke
- Mothers of Our
- Nations
- How does LaDuke
- use discourse of
- motherhood as a
- political tool?
- Nation as a political term?
47LaDuke (cont)
- The Earth as our Mother
- We are not populations nor minority groups. We
are peoples and nations of peoples. Under
international law we meet the criteria of nation
states. . .but indigenous nations are not
allowed to participate in the United Nations
(525)
48LaDuke (cont)
- Who has power to make decisions?
- How does she tie it in with a predator/prey
relationship? - What does she explain about environmental racism?
- How are the problems that emanate from
mistreatment of the earth reflected in the
devastation of the health and well-being of women?
49- Kathryn Shanley (Assiniboine) reminds us that
nothing defines indigenous peoples more than
belonging to a place, a homeland. No single
political issue has been more important to
indigenous peoples than the effort to retain land
bases, recover lost territories, and hang on to
hunting, water, mineral and other rights
associated with living in a particular place
(3). But, as she also explains, the home
indigenous people are struggling to
maintain/regain is also a place of self-esteem .
. . self-governance, cultural maintenance,
revitalization, and sovereignty (3).