Current Events

Columbus Day vs Indigenous Peoples Day

- Here's why you should top celebrating Christopher Columbus...

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Today is a national holiday, but not the one you think.  Originally, today was set aside to honor a thief — Christopher Columbus.  However, it’s time to permanently end that celebration and recognize today as INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DAY!

Current Events
For centuries we’ve been told Christopher Columbus “discovered” America. He didn’t.  He actually STOLE America, since it was already inhabited by its Indigenous Peoples.  Oh, and then he enslaved the very people he robbed!

When he first arrived, the Indigenous Peoples (in what would later be called America) were warm and welcoming toward him.  Recognizing he could use their politeness to his advantage, he went back to Spain and gathered an army.  He then returned to the new land, beat and killed the men, raped the women, then TOOK America.

Columbus

Rest assured: stealing something that already belonged to someone else is NOT the same as “discovering” it.

Each year, more and more US cities are choosing to recognize Native Americans rather than Christopher Columbus on this day.  However, the Italian-American community is not necessarily thrilled with the remix of their hero’s holiday.

Although Columbus Day is a painful reminder of the oppression endured by native peoples, some are saying the holiday is an important part of Italian-American heritage, and for that reason, is worth keeping.

“It serves as a unifying factor in our community,” said Basil M. Russo, the national president of the Order Italian Sons and Daughters of America. “Columbus Day is not a day that’s set aside to honor an individual, but rather is a day that’s set aside to recognize and honor a monumental historic event that began the process of over 500 years of worldwide immigration to America by oppressed people seeking a better life for their families,” he added.

“The ‘tearing down of history’ does not change that history,” John M. Viola, former president and chief operating officer of the National Italian American Foundation said. “In the wake of the cultural conflict that has ripped us apart over these months, I wonder if we as a country can’t find better ways to utilize our history to eradicate racism instead of inciting it.

“We believe Christopher Columbus represents the values of discovery and risk that are at the heart of the American dream,” Viola continued, “and that it is our job as the community most closely associated with his legacy to be at the forefront of a sensitive and engaging path forward, toward a solution that considers all sides.”

Columbus

In reality, today is not a day of celebration of the discovery of America.  Nor is it the celebration of the history of Italian-Americans.  Instead, it is a day that was erroneously set aside to celebrate a thief who discovered land that was already inhabited.

So, let’s celebrate the original and Indigenous Peoples of America.  Let’s even celebrate Italian-Americans and other immigrants who made their way to the “new land.”  However, it’s time to forget all about Columbus.  This is not his holiday and there is nothing to celebrate in his name or honor.

HAPPY INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DAY!

 


OK WASSUP! covers Current Events:
Columbus Day vs. Indigenous Peoples Day

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DJ

DJ is the creator and editor of OK WASSUP! He is also a Guest Writer/Blogger, Professional and Motivational Speaker, Producer, Music Consultant, and Media Contributor. New York, New York USA

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Truthiz1

For centuries we’ve been told Christopher Columbus “discovered” America. He didn’t. He actually STOLE America, since it was already inhabited by its Indigenous Peoples. Oh, and then he enslaved the very people he robbed! […]

DJ, you do this every year on “Columbus Day” and every year I applaud you for doing so. Well today is no different. I love love LOVE that you do this. Keep telling the Truth. Keep educating and enlightening your readers.

And I’ll keep coming back to this site…again…and again…and again….and again.

Wil

USA Today: The city of Columbus, Ohio, will not observe the controversial federal holiday honoring its namesake, Italian explorer Christopher Columbus, for the first time this year. City offices are instead scheduled to close on Veterans Day in November, though a spokesperson for the mayor’s office said the decision was not spurred by movements to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day, a counter-celebration held on the same day to commemorate Native Americans. Critics say the holiday honors the mass genocide and colonization of Native Americans, who lived in the Americas long before Christopher Columbus arrived in October 1492, while Italian-American organizations say the movement comes at the expense of a time to celebrate their ethnic heritage. Ohio’s capital city is the most populated city named after Columbus, with 860,000 people in the 2016 U.S. census. The city, however, lacks the funding to give its 8,500 employees both Veterans Day… Read more »

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