(@ 10:43 – promoted by winter rabbit)
What happened inside the walls of theIndian Boarding School that used to be to the right here?
Let’s look to history for some feasible answers.
(This video is over at Pretty Bird Woman House)
Crossposted at Native American Netroots &
Progressive Historians
Updates (watch video “Older Than America”):
Updates Continued (two stories from NPR):
American Indian Boarding Schools Haunt ManyThe late performer and Indian activist Floyd Red Crow Westerman was haunted by his memories of boarding school. As a child, he left his reservation in South Dakota for the Wahpeton Indian Boarding School in North Dakota. Sixty years later, he still remembers watching his mother through the window as he left.
American Indian School a Far Cry from the PastThese days, most American Indian children go to public schools. But remnants still exist of the boarding-school system the federal government set up for Indian children in the late 1800s.
Some people, such as U.S. officials at the Bureau of Indian Affairs, question whether the government should continue to be in the boarding-school business. Many students at these schools say they are a necessary escape from the poverty and addiction that plague many reservations.
(All bold mine)
SourceRICHARD PRATT — “KILL THE INDIAN, SAVE THE MAN”
As we have taken into our national family seven millions of Negroes, and as we receive foreigners at the rate of more than five hundred thousand a year, and assimilate them, it would seem that the time may have arrived when we can very properly make at least the attempt to assimilate our two hundred and fifty thousand Indians, using this proven potent line, and see if that will not end this vexed question and remove them from public attention, where they occupy so much more space than they are entitled to either by numbers or worth.
Children are educated to become responsible and free thinking adults in the future; however, those were not Elazor Wheelock’s goals when he began Dartmouth College in 1769.
To the contrary of genuine education’s goals, Wheelock’s Indian College in Hanover, New Hampshire and the Indian Boarding Schools that followed had these things
…cultural destruction, forced assimilation, and military regimen were popularized by Richard Henry Pratt, who started the Carlisle Indian School in 1879, and became cornerstones of most Indian boarding schools in the United States.
as the goals. So, just how did they come into reality?
Christian denominations were given power to build them on reservations as a result of Ulysses S. Grant’s “peace policy.”
The policy pursued toward the Indians has resulted favorably, so far as can be judged from the limited time during which it has been in operation. Through the exertions of the various societies of Christians to whom has been entrusted the execution of the policy, and the board of commissioners authorized by the law of April 10, 1869, many tribes of Indians have been induced to settle upon reservations, to cultivate the soil, to perform productive labor of various kinds, and to partially accept civilization.They are being cared for in such a way, it is hoped, as to induce those still pursuing their old habits of life to embrace the only opportunity which is left them to avoid extermination.
I recommend liberal appropriations to carry out the Indian peace policy,
not only because it is humane, Christian like, and economical, but because it is right.
Those Christian denominations also had some measure of control with the B.I.A., yet only in terms of carrying out the “peace policy” on reservations. Now that the general historical context has been set with a few specifics; consequently, what were the means to the “cultural destruction and forced assimilation?” Clearly put, it’s at least categorized into the following: physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, sexual, and neglectful abuse with at least illness and poor sanitation which sometimes even resulted in death. Ironically, Friends of the American Indian and Thomas Morgan believed those were merely the lesser evils.
The choices seemed simple and stark to the reformer movement – either kill all the Indians or assimilate them into white civilization through education.
“We must either fight Indians, feed them, or else educate them. To fight them is cruel, to feed them is wasteful, while to educate them is humane, economic, and Christian.”
Some examples of the extraordinary abuse and death in moreover extremely poor sanitation conditions of the Indian Boarding Schools are as follows:
When they got to Carlisle, the students were extremely homesick. Their long hair was cut. One boarding school student, Lone Wolf of the Blackfoot tribe, remembered:
“[Long hair] was the pride of all Indians. The boys, one by one, would break down and cry when they saw their braids thrown on the floor. All of the buckskin clothes had to go and we had to put on the clothes of the White Man. If we thought the days were bad, the nights were much worse. This is when the loneliness set in, for it was when we knew that we were all alone. Many boys ran away from the school because the treatment was so bad, but most of them were caught and brought back by the police.”
They were forbidden to practice their religion and were forced to memorize Bible verses and the Lord’s Prayer.
Rose was strapped for speaking her language. This is a common practice in schools all over the place at the time. Her open hands were hit with a large thick leather strap, many times.
I received the strap on several occasions, although not as harshly as Rose did in my story. I did see many native children whose hands were strapped so long and hard that they were blistered for days, as though they had been burned with fire.
Indian Boarding School Abuse – Including Child Molestation
In the late 19th century, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (in conjunction with various churches) placed thousands of Native American children into Indian Boarding Schools. At the boarding schools, the children were forced to give up their Indian heritage and were forbidden from speaking their native languages. They were routinely beaten and sexually abused, and some even died.
Here is a letter that author and professor of American Studies at the University of Minnesota, Brenda J. Child posted,
Boarding School Seasons: American Indian Families, 1900-1940 (North American Indian Prose Award Series) (Paperback)
by Brenda J. Child,that informs a parent of the death of its child from an Indian Boarding School.
(from photobucket)
(Italics mine)
Source
(letter is no longer up, this is the old address)Dear Sir,
It is with a feeling of sorrow that I write you telling of the death of your daughter Lizzie. She was sick but a short time and we did not think her so near her end. Last Wednesday I was called away to Minneapolis and I was very much surprised upon my return Saturday evening to find she was dead, as they had given us no information except she might live for a number of months. Those that were with her say she did not suffer, but passed away as one asleep. I am very sorry that you could not have seen your daughter alive, for she had grown quite a little and improved very much since you let her come here with me. If we had known she was going to live but so short a time, we would have made a great effort to have gotten you here before she died.
So wrote the superintendent of Flandreau Indian School to the father of a student who died of tuberculosis in a government boarding school in 1907. …Hundreds of children like Lizzie died at boarding school, never to return to their families and communities.
Meriam Report: GENERAL SUMMARY OF FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The survey staff finds itself obliged to say frankly and unequivocally that the provisions for the care of the Indian children in boarding schools are grossly inadequate.
The outstanding deficiency is in the diet furnished the Indian children, many of whom are below normal health.
The diet is deficient in quantity, quality, and variety. The effort has been made to feed the children on a per capita of eleven cents a day, plus what can be produced on the school farm, including the dairy. At a few, very few, schools, the farm and the dairy are sufficiently productive to be a highly important factor in raising the standard of the diet, but even at the best schools these sources do not fully meet the requirements for the health and development of the children. At the worst schools, the situation is serious in the extreme…
Next to dietary deficiencies comes overcrowding in dormitories. The boarding schools are crowded materially beyond their capacities. A device frequently resorted to in an effort to increase dormitory capacity without great expense is the addition of large sleeping porches. They are in themselves reasonably satisfactory, but they shut off light and air from the inside rooms, which are still filled with beds beyond their capacity.
The toilet facilities have in many cases not been increased proportionately to the increase in pupils, and they are fairly frequently not properly maintained or conveniently located. The supply of soap and towels has been inadequate…
What is a modern consequence of all this? Boarding School intergenerational trauma, which has been being addressed by those indigenous people who still suffer from its devastating effects.
Working to heal the wounds of boarding school
United Nations panel hopes to undo the damage caused by U.S. government’s Indian boarding school policies
By Karen Lynch“People in Indian country are still becoming aware of the effects of boarding school trauma,” said Dr. Eulynda Toledo-Benalli, Dine’, currently performing boarding school healing project research with the Navajo people. “This is something about our history that is not being talked about in a way that encourages healing from its intergenerational trauma…”
As a panelist, Dr. Toledo-Benalli said the pain she suffered as a second-generation survivor affected not only herself but her children, as well. “Many times I have said to my children that I’m sorry for the way I treat them. This is so, because parents learn parenting skills from their parents. It is said that the oppressed become the oppressors.
As Dr. Toledo-Benalli talked about the painful memories as a survivor, the memory of her father who was “snatched and taken to Colorado, to a place that he did not know even existed. My mother who was herding sheep was also snatched.
The Wellbriety Movement helps with boarding school intergenerational trauma as well.
The Healing Forest Model
The unhealed forest (community, left) transforms itself into a healed forest (right) by participating in and utilizing Wellbriety Movement activities, programs, and learning resources. The destructive roots of anger, guilt, shame and fear of the unhealed forest become the four gifts of the Sacred Hoop: Forgiving the Unforgivable, Healing, Unity and Hope. The wounded trees become healthy trees and the community participates in wellness involvements, such as, sober powwows, tradition, culture and spirituality. These are some of the gifts of the Wellbriety Movement.
(Medicine Bluffs)
Having looked to history for some feasible answers as to what happened inside the walls of that Boarding School, as well as the definition of historical trauma and one helpful solution, I also suggest reading:
Tim Giago’s book “Children Left Behind: The Dark Legacy of Indian Mission Boarding Schools,”
and jenniestarrish’s diary Kill the Indian, save the man at Native American Netroots.
In my family’s case, my dad was sent to a boarding school about 800 miles from home. This was in the early 1930’s and that was an incredible distance to cover in those years.
I hope with all my heart that those relatives, known and unknown who still suffer from
boarding school intergenerational trauma are able to the find peace and resolution that they need for themselves and for their loved ones.
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a couple months ago. It’s a must read.
A nice man I talked with numerous times over the last 20 years has passed.
He also went to the gov. boarding schools. He was an American Indian activist.
He died Thursday.
A great loss.
May his son, Tall Bear, carry his father`s voice well.
Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist
It seems to take a heap of poor folks to keep a few rich ones comfortable. Wonder what Will Rogers would say about that.
this is amazing stuff. So much of what I was taught about Native American history was limited to forced removal and a few battles. This everyday, mundane cultural genocide wasn’t even on the map. Thank you very much for all your work on this.
near Salem, Oregon. I went to college nearby at Willamette University in the 70’s and Chemawa was a place where several college students would go for sociology work or as student teachers.
Chemawa is now the oldest “continuously operating boarding school” in the US (Chemawa History).
There has always been some controversy every so often over elements of the school’s operation in the past, and I think there was a fairly recent incident that is being investigated.
I’ve also heard stories from an older Puyallup who attended there in the thirties. She was equal parts ambivalent and fond of her time there – much of her fondness probably came from the simple fact that life at home was far worse than life at the school.
I think this was the case for many students during the Depression.
My relatives would probably have chosen boarding school over life at home as well if they had had a choice.
Certainly on reservations where students were not sent to boarding school far from home, the practice of Indian life and beliefs were actively and sometimes violently discouraged for so many years.
It brings to mind so many people.
1) One patient of mine as an intern in medicine lived on a reservation in Montana– never had her cervical cancer diagnosed. It spread to her pelvis, and she had horrible spinal cord pain. She was unable to work and lived in a car in Seattle. Our third year resident from Montana, a racist fundamentalist Christian, derided her like she was worth nothing. When it was our own governmental system that failed to give her adequate early diagnosis. I will never forget her.
2) Last Sunday on an art tour, I met a Tlingit carver whose mother was the last Native speaker. She tried to teach others, and Israel Shotridge honors her memory. He does beautiful work. I encourage anyone to look at his website to see his art.
3) My grandmother lived near the ferry dock that took the children across a pass to the boarding school in Puget Sound. This was in the 1890-1900 era. She played with the grandchildren of Chief Sealth while they waited for the ferry, and even when she had lost her memory for many things, this memory remained. It may have been the best time of her life. She was Scandinavian. I can’t remember which museum in Seattle has extensive photos of the boarding school kids. The schools look like clapboard churches.
4) Even on the Siletz in Oregon,at tribal facilities, there are people who try to teach others. One of my long-time patients is called “grandma” by everyone. She is involved in the Head Start program, and she cuddles all of the children. I think of this as an adaptation of one of our programs to accomplish what may have been normal in the past without the “aid” of our government.
Have you read the children’s book that one the National Book Award. I have not, but it is about a boy leaving the reservation near Spokane. I plan to read it.
Thanks again.
My Great-Grandmother, Agnes Lapage-Dalbec died in 1993 at age 92….she was a wonderful women; we called her “cookie gramma”.
She was Ojibwe & French and REFUSED to talk about her Native roots.
She would get very angry if anyone asked, so people in our family stopped asking. I don’t know what happened to her that would cause such a reaction, but I think about it often. There is so much I don’t know. She lived most of her life in Superior, Wisconsin and Blueberry. Had her children in Bemidji and Hibbing MN. I don’t know if she was in a boarding school, but being half/half may have endured racism on both sides.
Peace.
Winter Rabbit.
peace.