I am ashamed of President Donald J. Trump.
On Monday, November 27, at an event honoring the Navajo Code
Talkers, President Trump took the name of a well-respected and loved historic
figure from the Native community, Pocahontas, and used it as a racial slur in
his ongoing and adolescent attacks on U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren. Let me
repeat that, in a speech meant to honor an incredible group of men, who not
only used their sacred language to help the United States of America win a war,
but many of whom are also boarding school survivors, who as young children endured
the pain of having the US Government literally attempt to beat their language
out of them in an effort to "kill the Indian to save the man." These
men endured those beatings. They held on to their language. And less than a
decade later they used that language to save the United States of America. And
President Trump could not muster the self-control to hold his tongue long
enough to honor their service.
On top of that, it is well a known fact that Donald Trump
considers Andrew Jackson to be one of his heroes. On March 15, 2017, President
Trump visited the Hermitage and, in honor of Jacksons 250th
birthday, laid a wreath at his tomb. In his speech commemorating the occasion,
President Trump referred to our seventh President as "the very great
Andrew Jackson...[who] was one of our great Presidents." And he concluded
his speech by thanking Andrew Jackson for his service and committing to build
on his legacy.
But Andrew Jackson was a slave owner and his legacy as
President was the ethnic cleansing and removal of American Indians. President Jackson pushed for and signed the
Indian Removal Act. This was the act which allowed the US Army, in practice, to
forcibly remove native tribes from lands in the east to empty lands further in
the west. This resulted in the Trail of Tears for the Choctaw, the Chickasaw
and the Cherokee, as well as the Long Walk for the Navajo and the Pueblo. All
told, about a dozen tribes experienced forced relocation due to the Indian
Removal Act and tens of thousands of native people died as a direct result of
this Act. At the Hermitage, President Trump attempted to dismiss this horrific
history by calling Andrew Jackson “a product of his time.” That explanation may
work to excuse an elderly grandparent who makes a racially insensitive remark
at a dinner party. But it does not excuse a US President who knowingly and
intentionally enacted a policy of removal and ethnic cleansing against an
entire race of people.
And if you look at the picture of President Trump standing
with the Navajo Code Talkers in the Oval Office, you can see very clearly in
the background a portrait of Andrew Jackson.
I am ashamed of President Donald J. Trump.
The Long Walk occurred in the early 1860s. That is a mere 60
to 70 years before these Code Talkers were born. It was their grandparents
whose crops, livestock and homes the US army destroyed as they rounded up the
Navajo people to forcibly march us to Fort Sumner. It was their great-grandparents
who the soldiers shot along the way. It was their elders who died of
exhaustion, exposure, malnutrition and other unspeakable war crimes as the
United States of America worked tirelessly to complete its self-proclaimed
manifest destiny. The amount of pain, suffering, torture and dehumanization
that the men who stood before President Trump endured, not for their country,
but by their country, is beyond imagination.
And President Donald J. Trump could not hold his tongue. He
could not find the courtesy to conduct the ceremony in a different location
beyond the genocidal gaze of the seventh President of the United States. And he
could not control his incessant need to keep the spotlight on himself, no
matter what the context, or who his audience.
President Trump’s words and actions clearly demonstrated
that he does not honor the immense sacrifice and incredible service of the
Navajo Code Talkers.
I am not primarily angry, nor am I foremost disappointed, for
both of those emotions would require me to have higher expectations of
President Trump. No, I am ashamed. Ashamed that the United States of America
has a President who conducts himself as a man who has no honor, no
self-respect, and no relatives.
Mark Charles
(Navajo)
(Navajo)
2 comments:
It is truly sad and shameful. He pretends to honor them, but does not really care. It is sad that he has a powerful position and that things he decides affect the lives of these men and other individuals who were and are oppressed.
I'm not Native American, but am incredibly proud of how you conducted yourself and your honest response. YOU sir, exemplify what I want in a President.
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