Hey all,
I present to you..my first article featured in the New Orleans Catholic Worker newsletter! I hope it offers good food for thought as you (and I) approach the Thanksgiving holiday.
Also, check out the rest of the newsletter at our website: http://nolacatholicworker.org
The "Giving" of Thanksgiving
This year, I approach the Thanksgiving table with not
only thanks, but also with a special invitation for others
and myself. I’ve learned that in order to give, we must
unlearn how we take. And in so doing, we must unlearn
what we’ve been taught about Thanksgiving.
In classrooms, we learn a storybook version of
Thanksgiving, one that embraces patriotism, generosity,
and mutuality. Like other children, I believed that the
goodness of the Plymouth Pilgrims and the Native
peoples was a perfect example to us all.
It was only later in my teen years that I
discovered my history textbooks had sorely misguided
me. The Thanksgiving story was just a story, one full of
charming fabrications and an appeal to American
idealism. Our popular story not only gives an overly
simplified version of the exchanges between the Pilgrims
and Native peoples, but also permits an unpardonable
omission of facts.
It most often goes unmentioned, for instance,
how the Pilgrims took over land that was already home
to others, literally building over fields that Natives had
cleared to plant corn and other food sources. Our story
omits the details about the house robberies that took
place, the forced conversions to Christianity, the
epidemic of plague that wiped out thousands of Native
peoples; all events that fall into a larger continuum of
cultural and ethnic cleansing.
After learning this truth, I knew that my days of
celebrating Thanksgiving
with joyful naiveté were
over. I can’t disregard
actual reality, even if it’s
uncomfortable, even if it
disturbs my ability to
celebrate something in
feel-good fashion. I am
accountable to what I
learn, and holidays are no
exception.
If we want to
truly focus on the
“giving” aspect of
Thanksgiving, we could
begin by recognizing how
our dominant culture rewards acts of taking. This reality
supports why we have history books that depict the
Pilgrims’ colonialism as something destined and
democratic. No doubt we see similar characterizations of
contemporary figures and corporations who legitimize
such acts as the displacement of marginalized peoples
from their communities, to follow a self-serving agenda.
Thanksgiving is not an isolated incident in history. It is
sustained, like it originally was, through ongoing forms
of racism, ethnocentrism, and xenophobia.
Once we recognize this degree of taking we can
actively resist it with our giving. I do this by maintaining a type of gratitude that does justice. I do this
by showing awareness of how I too embody
a colonizer’s legacy through my white racial
identity, my middle class status, and so on.
I have a lot to be thankful for; my
strong network of family and friends, access
to education, and financial support. When I
utilize these resources with a will to give, an
occasion like Thanksgiving becomes an
invitation into dialogue. It becomes a call to
action.
So, with moving gratitude, I
approach this Thanksgiving with a sense of
responsibility. I too can undo how I take in
order to give. Ω
Steph, I appreciate the thought and honesty that went into this piece. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI am so grateful to have you in my life.
love, Lindsey
Beautiful! An amazingly thoughtful, clear and concise "Call to action." Your words truly show the relationship between "thanks" and "giving." I am thankful to know such a giving person. (And talented, too!)
ReplyDeleteLauren