Monday, October 13, 2025

Indigenous People’s Day Eclipse of Columbus Day Threatened

Honoring Heritage Celebration Indigenous Peoples Day Culture Stock Photos -  Free & Royalty-Free Stock Photos from Dreamstime 

Note—Just as the celebration of Indigenous People’s Day as a replacement for an official Columbus Day holiday finally seemed widely accepted the Trump DEI scourge and purge threatens to erase it—and the true story of the people it represents.  Federal institutions have been ordered to ignore it and to only mention Columbus Day.  Curricula from kindergarten to post-doc are ordered to scrub Native Americans except as a threat to European/colonialist/American expansion.  Now abetted by the Government Shutdown the “untrustworthy” National Park Service, Smithsonian, National Archives, and other institutions are silenced this day.  We are not.

Today is the Federal Holiday honoring Christopher Columbus, the alleged discover of the New World, who made his first landfall on the island of San Salvador on October 12, 1492.  Years ago, Congress, in all of its wisdom, assigned the holiday to the second Monday in October to make way for a possible three day week-end for the few people who get the day off—or possibly to extend the giant mattress sales that seem to have become one of the most visible traditions of the holiday.

The trouble is Columbus has been falling out of favor for some time, except among the Italian-Americans who used his Italian roots to claim their seat at the American table.  The Columbus Day parades in the big cities are less about the Navigator—an ironic title for someone who didn’t know where the hell he was—and more about, as an Italian friend once put it, Gumba Pride.  

Columbus Day Parade - JCCIA 

                 Italian Americans display their ethnic pride and flex their political muscles at Chicago's big Columbus Day Parade.

In 2021 Puerto Rican Alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa of Chicago’s 35th Ward sponsored replacement official recognition of Columbus Day with  Indigenous People’s Day in 2020  It did not cancel the privately sponsored Columbus Day parade which could continue to roll.  The city sponsored music and cultural events over a two day period.

The original holiday worked as long as the Columbus story told in 19th Century school primers was the only information out there.  But those damn historians insisted on poking around.  Lo and behold it turns out Columbus was not a very nice man.  In fact, when King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella rewarded him for his voyages with the title of Admiral of the Ocean Sea and the job of Viceroy to rule the new lands, he was so brutal, venal, and corrupt that the Catholic Priests sent to save the souls of the natives petitioned their Majesties to have him removed.  So did various adventurers and would-be Conquistadors who he slapped in irons for horning in on his exclusive franchise.

 

Columbus was personally responsible for the genocide of the Carib nation and opened the door to centuries of atrocities, exploitation, colonialist oppression, and settler replacement across Americas.

In the end he was stripped of his titles and put in irons himself.

One of the offenses with which he was charged was virtually wiping out the Carib nation which populated most of the islands of the Caribbean by turning them into slaves.  Within ten years the once numerous people were gone and the Spanish had to replace them by buying Black Africans from Arab dealers.  

 

An early Native American protest to Columbus Day--marching at Michigan Avenue and Wacker Drive in Chicago after being turned away from the Columbus Day Parade in 1970.    From such modest beginnings a mighty movement grew. 

By the 1960’s Native peoples in both North and South America were protesting celebrations of Columbus and demanding that the people who were his victims should be the honorees, not the thief.

In 1977 at a United Nations sponsored International Conference on Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations in the Americas held in Geneva, Switzerland the idea of replacing Columbus Day celebrations with a day honoring Indigenous Peoples was first proposed.  As the 500 year anniversary of the “Discovery” approached, Native delegates to a conference held in Quito, Ecuador in 1990 determined to plan protests and demand recognition.  “Nobody discovered us,” they asserted, “We knew where we were.”

Native groups in California were among the most vocal and organized in the protests in 1992. They persuaded the city of Berkley to become the first to rename the holiday locally to the Day of Solidarity with Indigenous People, better known as Indigenous Peoples Day.  The movement spread across the state.  Although only two other cities followed Berkley’s lead in officially adopting the name for the local holiday, school systems, libraries, and colleges began holding alternative events.  And activists began marching and sometimes disrupting official Columbus Day festivities.

South Dakota, with a large Tribal population, became the first state to jettison Columbus and adopt what they call Native American Day.  That name is also used by several Oklahoma based tribes.  Hawaii replaced Columbus Day with Discoverers Day, commemorating the Polynesian discoverers of the Islands. 

Several cities, including Columbus, Ohio have simply dropped the holiday entirely and canceled the traditional parades.  In San Francisco, with its large Italian community axed Columbus and simply declared the day Italian Heritage Day instead but in 2018 also adopted Indigenous Peoples Day.

By this year 20 states have joined the parade to replace or co-celebrate Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day in addition to countless municipalities, counties, and other units of local government. 

So far Congress has ignored calls to make a change on the Federal level.

This year Chicago is one of those cities still going ahead with its giant parade down State Street today but it will not be an official City celebration. 

Relations between Native American and Italian communities were completely ruptured after statues of Columbus were vandalized in the wake of Black Lives Matter protests that demanded monuments to historic figures who despite other accomplishments were perpetrators of oppression to People of Color and other minorities.  The City removed the statues for “safe keeping” but  waffled for years on restoring at least one in place until this year when Mayor Brandon Johnson finally announced that none of the three Columbus statues on City or Park District property will be restored. 

Native and Afro-Mexican traditions take center stage at Old Town School  concert for Indigenous Peoples Day - Chicago Sun-Times 

      Native and Afro-Mexican traditions took center stage at an Old Town School of Folk Music concert.  Events like it may draw ICE kidnappers.

Ironically this year Indigenous People’s Day observations in Chicago may be threatened by targeted ICE actions because immigrants and refugees from Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, South America and elsewhere often want to celebrate their own indigenous roots.  

 

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