Do Native Americans Celebrate Thanksgiving?

Do Native Americans Celebrate Thanksgiving?

Started
13 September 2020
Petition to
Fb Proni
Signatures: 1Next Goal: 5
Support now

Why this petition matters

Started by Polash Das

Do Native Americans Celebrate Thanksgiving?

For the most of non-native Americans, Thanksgiving may be a time to believe belongings you are grateful for, eat far an excessive amount of turkey, stuffing, and pumpkin pie, and relax ahead of the TV to catch a football. The stories of the history of this US federal holiday come from youth in class. They include tales of pilgrims and Native Americans sitting down together for a friendly feast.

Unfortunately, these stories are based more on fantasy than any true sense of what really happened all those years ago.

Once people begin to understand how this country truly came to be, who were the primary people on its shores, and what happened to surround the circumstances of the thought of Thanksgiving, the more likely they're to reject the thought completely.

For Native Americans, the choice to celebrate the normal European-style Thanksgiving is right down to both personal preference and more serious contemplation of what really happened all those years ago.

Learning about history is a crucial part of knowing the way to act today. From the time you were in kindergarten, you undoubtedly heard many tales about the Pilgrims landing on Plymouth Rock and building a civilization from the supposed wilderness of the New World. These childhood stories still paint your understanding.

For many Native Americans, they're a symbol of the continuing disrespect and dismissal of their contribution and place in what's now us of America.

Do Native Americans Celebrate Thanksgiving?


Of course, the whole population of Native American people within the times don't do an equivalent thing and make an equivalent decision.

There are undoubtedly many that enjoy a roast turkey, green bean casserole, and viewing a football within the afternoon thereon Thursday in November. However, those more curious about their culture and therefore the true history of our country understand that these modern trappings of the vacation don't touch on what really happened and what their ancestors went through back within the 16th and 17th centuries.

Some consider any celebration of the fashionable sort of Thanksgiving to be firmly rooted in disrespect and ultimately a nasty thing to try to to. The attitudes expressed by many are understandable once historical truth is revealed. If a Native American child is forced in class to attach together a paper headdress and learn that the ECU pilgrims welcomed them to their feast within the spirit of friendship and brotherhood, it's just another example of the perceived whitewashing of history.

Support now
Signatures: 1Next Goal: 5
Support now
Share this petition in person or use the QR code for your own material.Download QR Code

Decision Makers

  • Fb Proni