Truth Be Told

Signed copies of the book I co-authored with Soong-Chan Rah, "Unsettling Truths - The Ongoing Dehumanizing Legacy of the Doctrine of Discovery" are available from my website: https://wirelesshogan.com/2019/12/18/available-now-unsettling-truths/.

Friday, July 4, 2014

The World Knows...

People know...

Not just Americans, but the entire globe.

People know that the founders didn't mean it then, nor does this nation mean it now. Sure the words were written down, and our leaders frequently point to them as evidence that we are good. But no one really meant them. They were merely a means to an end.

Back in 1776, when representatives from a bunch of colonies wrote the words, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal," they did not literally mean ALL men.

But people know that.

They see the news reports that on July 2nd, 2014 (*) a town within the United States of America congregated, waving their red, white and blue flags, and demonized busloads of undocumented immigrants, telling them to go home, that they are not welcome here.

The world knows.

The entire globe looks on and shakes their heads. They understand that if that if anyone in that crowd had any integrity whatsoever, they would climb aboard those same buses and depart this land themselves. For this nation is undocumented, never once having asked for, nor having received permission from the indigenous tribes and peoples of this land, that they might live here.

But if people know why are things not changing?  Why do we continue to make the same mistakes over and over?  And why do the countries of the world continue to follow the lead of the United States of America?

As a Navajo man living on our reservation, when I hear the United States speak on the national and global stage, I cannot help but compare our country to a runaway pre-teenager who, while running for his life, hijacked a car full of people at gunpoint. He shot or wounded all of the occupants, climbed in and took off driving down the road. But he had no idea how to drive, and he could barely even see over the steering wheel. As the vehicle moved down the road he could hear it scrapping parked cars, driving over landscaping, even hitting children and pedestrians on the sidewalks. He could not see the damage but he could feel the jerking of the suspension and the bumps of the tires. He could also hear the scraping of metal on metal, the breaking of glass, and even the screams of the people as he lumbered through the neighborhood, wreaking havoc everywhere he went. 

But on he drove. For over 500 hundred miles he drove. Soon he noticed that there was a long line of cars behind him. Occasionally one of them would try to pass him, but his erratic driving and frequent swerving either forced them off the road or caused them to slow down and stay behind. Soon he began to fancy himself their leader, when actually, most drivers, fearing for their own safety, were simply wise enough to drive behind him and stay well out of his way.

He didn't stop. He couldn't stop. For while he felt bad about what he had done and he knew that continuing to drive would mean causing more damage in the road ahead, that was for more preferable than the thought of stopping the car, getting out and facing the destruction he had left in his wake.

As a Native American, one of the original occupants of the hijacked car, the temptation is to respond to this child out of anger. His behavior has caused untold destruction, massive deaths and incredible pain. But responding out of anger will only feed our hurt and escalate his fear and his irrational behavior.  So anger is not helpful.

The child wavers between the silent sobs of remorse and the defiant screaming of commands and the waving of his gun.  He is in incredible pain. And he knows it. Everybody knows it. But almost no one is willing, or able, to speak up. Anger is not needed. What is needed is for the original occupants of the car, with tender but necessary authority, to address the child. Acknowledge his pain. And help him to stop the car.

As a Native American I daily see, and experience, the historical trauma caused by the actions of the child driving this car. But I also see that his hurt is even worse than ours. He has no home. He has no family. He has no place to belong. And he is terrified that if he stops driving the car he will be thrown out and left alone.

I often tell people that the United States of America is a nation that desperately needs to be adopted. This is a nation immigrants who have left their lands, their families, their people and their cultures. Everything that they knew and understood has been left behind. And they came to this continent largely following a financial dream of prosperity. But they never asked for, nor were they ever given permission to be here, and now they feel lost. They have no idea why the rivers flow where they flow, or why the mountains lie where they lie. As native people, our creation stories take place on this continent. And they tell us how the mountains and rivers came to be. They add to our sense of belonging here, and they motivate our desire to respect this land.

As indigenous peoples of this land, Native Americans are one of the few populations left in the world who are able to speak with authority to the United States of America. But we cannot do that if we are their victims. We cannot do that by suing them in their courts. And we cannot do that by collecting reparations for their injustices. Instead, we must rise above that way of thinking and adopt this nation of immigrants. Sharing our stories, our families and our histories with our uninvited guests. For in the end, they are merely runaway children, scared and desperately looking for a place to belong.
.
So what can we do? I have 2 practical ideas of where I think we can start.

  1. Truth Commission: I recently attended the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Canada. I was deeply moved by the healing that came from the telling and hearing of stories from the boarding school survivors who came forward. The truth telling was even more powerful than the statements of reconciliation that were given by the government and the churches. For that proof will be shown in their willingness to follow through on their pledges. But the truth telling stood powerfully on its own.

    The United States is not ready for a Truth and Reconciliation Commission, for reconciliation requires an acknowledgement of past wrongs as well as a commitment to repentance moving forward. So far, our leaders have demonstrated no desire to do that, as was evidenced by the toothless US Apology to Native Peoples that was buried in the 2010 Department of Defense Appropriations Act.  It ended with a disclaimer and was never announced, publicized or read by Congress or the White House.


    But a Truth Commission? A significant platform where our native elders and boarding school survivors can come forward and share their stories? This is completely doable and would shed some much needed light on the injustices that have been hidden for decades, even centuries.  We could also leave an empty chair. A space for this nation to come forward, willingly and on its own to join the conversation for reconciliation.
  2. Immigration Reform: As native peoples, we can rise up and take our place as the indigenous hosts of this land by sharing our wisdom and understanding of the proper protocol for dealing with visitors and foreigners who come to this continent, both invited and un-invited.  For nearly a decade I have watched and listened from the reservation as this nation of immigrants has unsuccessfully struggled with how to reform their immigration laws. They stand on their soap boxes and demonize the undocumented immigrants and each other, but none are able to acknowledge that they lack both the integrity as well as the authority to “comprehensively and justly reform” these laws. They need our help, for they are incapable of doing it on their own.
I have been speaking about these topics for nearly a decade. And recently I started an organization to better organize people and begin working specifically on projects like these. Our organization is called 5 Small Loaves and we are deeply committed to pursuing reconciliation through honest education, intentional conversation and meaningful action.

Our nation is in pain. Our people are in pain. And our land is in pain. It is time to step up, acknowledge our past, and begin to change the conversation.

If you are interested in joining this dialogue and partnering on these projects, please contact us.


Mark Charles                          
5 Small Loaves
Web:
Facebook:
Twitter:

(* date edited July 5, 2014)

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

The United States of America is a nation that desperately needs to be adopted...As indigenous peoples of this land, Native Americans are one of the few populations left in the world who are able to speak with authority to the United States of America. But we cannot do that if we are their victims. We cannot do that by suing them in their courts. And we cannot do that by collecting reparations for their injustices. Instead, we must rise above that way of thinking and adopt this nation of immigrants. Sharing our stories, our families and our histories with our uninvited guests.

Anonymous said...

Would you have the borders be completely open? Granted, you want some say, but, will more poor people be good for you and yours?

uplift htstiga

M. Camp said...

I am so thankful to have met you and being present I the midst of you sharing your heart! This nation needs more vocal honesty and integrity. From our platforms to our pulpits. Essentially, from the foundations on which this nation was built is a lie! Even out sacred religious beliefs are nothing more than an European abstraction. If you think about it, we are all hypocrites because how can you stand for truth, when all that you know, and believe is a lie and yet we chose to move forward as though nothing ever happen. No one is free until all are free! I don't know, but this has given me a new perspective on life, worship, and humanity!

Diane Gilliam-Weeks said...

My ancestors were survivors of the Trail of Tears. I encourage your audience to read this and participate in Mark Charles' call for a Truth Commission. Hopefully by the end of the day 5 small loaves will have more than 471 likes.

Anonymous said...

So lets see if I understand. Everyone in the US (save Mark Charles and native Americans--who also had to come from somewhere BTW) are metaphorical children who have no idea what they are doing and the US is the greatest of the nations on the planet that doesn't have a clue about pretty much everything.

BUT, Mark Charles has all the answers and can straighten out the US on everything if only everyone else in the country listens to him and does as he says?

Seriously, this is how this post reads.

Anonymous said...

You appeal to the gospel of Jesus Christ in your fund raising pitches and arguments. Huh? Is not the gospel of Jesus Christ part of the invasion of the Americas? You suggest everything these invaders from Europe brought is, well, evil. How to you except from that the religion they brought?

So-called native Americans (again, they too came from somewhere) had no Jesus Christ or Christianity until it was brought by the same racist European community that you so condemn and that created the "United States of America" that is the "nation that needs to be adopted," to which only "Native Americans .. are able to speak with authority."