It remains a cause of wonder to me that people express surprise at how powerful conservative Christianity is in the United States. Do they not remember who it was that sailed on board the Mayflower that put ashore at Plymouth Rock? The history that's taught to American school children says that the folk who celebrated America's first Thanksgiving were fleeing religious persecution in England. Technically I suppose that it's true they weren't being allowed the freedom to practice their brand of Christianity back home, but did anyone bother to find out what exactly they weren't being allowed to do that so impinged upon their liberty?
One doesn't need to look much further than the reign of Oliver Cromwell to understand why they weren't being allowed to do what they wanted back home. Cromwell led a Puritan revolution that saw the overthrow, and execution of King Charles 1 of England. During his reign of terror Cromwell and his Puritan followers outlawed any form of worship that wasn't in compliance with their strictures, closed all the theatres as sinful, and invaded Ireland and razed it to the ground for being Catholic. Saying that the Puritans were fleeing persecution because they weren't allowed to do what they wanted is like saying that denying the Klan the right to hold a lynching impinges on their civil rights.
Of course in the 16th and 17th century, nearly anyone crossing an ocean anywhere and travelling to a "new world" was a Christian of some sort or another. Portuguese and Spanish sailors were circling the globe and "discovering" South America; the French and the British were dividing up North America between them; and everybody was trying to find an easy way to get to the East. It was the great era of Christian exploration and conquest. According to a new book by Native American author Steven T. Newcomb, Pagans In The Promised Land: Decoding the Doctrine of Christian Discovery, published by Fulcrum Publishing, it's here we need to look to find the roots of American policy towards the indigenous people of the North American continent.
Steven Newcomb is a columnist for Indian Country Today and co-founder and co-director of the Indigenous Law Institute(ILI). In his work for ILI he works to support indigenous nations and peoples to protect their sacred and ancestral homelands, restore and revitalize traditions, and to heal from the past 500 years of colonization. A good deal of that kind of work involves finding the means to advocate for various nations in courtrooms across the United States, which in turn means he's had to make a study of the rationale behind Judicial rulings that have found both for and against Native Americans in the past.








Article comments
1 - renee iron hawk
It is very encourgaging to me when anyone validates our native cultures. We are a viable, intelligent and spiritual resource that our American nation is almost completely unaware of because of the fear established between us.
2 - len weaskus
agreed. yet how do ndns at lest, if we cannot unite, know who our friends are! c.trimble is under attack by his tribe as others are(being attacked) both non and ndn alike for advancing our cause. read f.jennings, "invasion of america" that debunks f.parkers 7 vol.set "france&england in n. america(1851-18920 as racist, fraudulent(research doc's)eugenics in america.by e.black. w.a.plecker's "racial integrity act 1924. read the racial laws of virginia commonwelth.ad naseum. we must know who are friends trully are. we ndns are not a conquered people, never were! a.jackson's so-cal'd victory over the creeks was pure slaughter then in 1814 and is today. we have friends, we are not alone