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A Thanksgiving
Revision
The transformation of the Noble Savage…
[by Bruce S. Thornton] 11/23/05
Thanksgiving
Day is perhaps our favorite time to indulge our collective
idealizations of the past. Who does not warm to that iconic
scene memorialized in thousands of grammar-school decorations––doughty
Puritans and noble Indians feasting together on the fruits
of the New World earth graciously provided by the native hosts?
That is how we like to imagine the Indian, as the Noble Savage,
uncorrupted by the decadent Old World that the adventurous
Puritans were themselves fleeing.
Thanks to
the revisionist historians, of course, we all know that the
myth disguises an unpleasant reality of exploitation, betrayal,
land grabbing, and slaughter. We have heard the tale repeatedly,
even in cartoons like Disney's Pocahontas, itself testimony
to how mainstream and orthodox is the supposed revision of
orthodoxy. Yet in setting the record straight, some revisionists
have perpetuated an equally mythic picture of Indians, one
that distorts and loses sight of their complex humanity.
From the very
beginning of the European encounter with the American natives,
the Indian
has had to bear the burden of mythic
expectations. Columbus himself saw in the Caribbean Indians the
denizens of a lost Golden Age, that long-ago time when people
lived in simple harmony with nature, knowing neither war nor
property nor law nor greed: the Indians were "guiltless
and unwarlike, very gentle, not knowing what is evil, nor the
sins of murder and theft." Increased contact with Indians
soon disabused Europeans of these idealizations. For ages before
Columbus, warfare, scalping, torture, and massacres of women
and children were going on across the continent, as attested
by the archaeological record. Nor should we be surprised. Like
all human peoples all over the earth, Indians competed violently
for scant resources with others who needed them just as badly.
By the 19th century,
the Indian had become as well the embodiment of another Golden-Age
motif––the human harmony with
a maternal nature who freely bestows her gifts on her children.
The Indian was transformed into the natural ecologist, communing
with nature, careful not to waste the bounty a beneficent Mother
Earth had provided. We all know that Plains Indians, for example,
killed only the bison they needed, making use of every scrap
of bone and gut. Then the whites came along, shooting bison from
trains, driving whole herds to extinction. Thus in 1841 the painter
George Catlin apostrophized the Indian and the bison as "the
joint and original tenants of the soil, and fugitives together
from the approach of civilized man."
Today, the Indian as Noble Savage ecologist is firmly lodged
in the national consciousness. Unfortunately, the Indian Ecologist
is a myth no more true than the picture of Puritan-Indian harmony.
Like all peoples in human history, American Indians exploited
their harsh environment in order to survive, limited only by
small numbers and crude technologies. Pre-contact Indians used
fire extensively to clear forests for farming, promote tree species
more useful to them, and facilitate travel and hunting. Whole
herds of game were driven off cliffs, with no regard whatsoever
for modern ecological conceptions of waste or conservation.
Nor did Indians worship
a bountiful Mother Earth. Contrary to modern Romantics who
take for granted an adequate supply of
cheap, safe food, Indians were practical realists who were concerned
with survival and who depended on animal protein for nutrition.
Nor did they worry about waste or extinction, concepts absent
from their world-view. Indeed, in the religion of many tribes
dead game was reincarnated––thus the more animals
one killed, the more there were. Again, in this the Indians were
simply behaving as all peoples have in human history, for whom
the natural world was filled with fearsome, fickle, destructive
forces indifferent to human survival. For all pre-modern humans,
starvation and famine were concerns more important than whether
or not their actions damaged the environment, threatened animals
with extinction, or disrupted some presumed primal harmony with
Mother Earth. They were worried about eating one more day.
Yet to point out
that American Indians were no different from other human beings
is to invite charges of racism, or at the
very least of being insensitive to the real suffering European
contact left in its wake. That the European discovery of the
Americas was a disaster for the peoples living there is a truism,
though we should remember that bacteria and microbes did that
most of the killing. Yet all human history is a tragic record
of vast movements of people searching for resources, and willing
to use violence against those who already possess them. The Persians,
Romans, Arabs, Huns, Mongols, Turks, Bantu, Khmer––all
wrought devastation on the peoples unfortunate enough to be in
their paths. For the Indians, the European invasion of the New
World was one more act in the tragedy of history.
Moreover, reducing
the European contact with American Indians to a therapeutic
melodrama of good and evil ultimately dehumanizes
both sides. Loading the Indian with our mythic obsessions does
nothing, of course, to change the past, and actively distracts
us from solving the very real problems that too many American
Indians face today, none of whom are served by our Golden-Age
daydreams. No Indian benefits from Ward Churchill’s fake
Indian identity, one that worked because it traded on the myths
that have been enshrined in university Indian studies programs.
No Indian benefits from the NCAA’s attempt to punish schools
with Indian mascots––an act of monumental hypocrisy,
by the way, given that the NCAA is an organization making billions
from black athletes admitted to universities they are unqualified
for and can’t graduate from. No Indian benefits when business
projects that could bring economic benefits to a region are stalled
because they might offend some Indian religious belief that in
many cases is very likely a modern invention.
Most important, Noble
Savage Indianism serves an identity politics that reduces individuals
to some fantasy group heritage, one
predicated on their grievances as victims, and then demands benefits
for the group so defined. But such politics run counter to the
fundamental premises of our government. Like everyone else, American
Indians are individuals first: their rights are those our political
system confers on individuals, and that is how they should be
treated––as unique individuals, not as the mascots
of some imagined idealized identity invented by whites to gratify
their mythic longings.
A lie liberates and benefits no one. Instead, we should proceed
with a clear-eyed recognition of the tragic complexity of history,
with all its contradictions, failed good intentions, and mixed
motives. And we should remember that in America at least, individuals,
not fabricated group identities, are the locus of rights and
responsibilities and value. So this Thanksgiving Day, rather
than indulging our gratifying myths, let's remember the hard
truth of universal human evil and failure, at the same time giving
thanks that despite all the suffering and misery of history,
on this land a world was created were millions of individuals
live free from the violence and hunger and tyranny our ancestors
had to endure. -one-
copyright
2005 Bruce S. Thornton
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