Meet the indigenous people reclaiming Columbus Day
This Columbus Day weekend, the Harlem River Field on Randall’s Island in New York City was host to this year’s Pow Wow and Indigenous Peoples’ Celebration. Around five hundred participants from as far as South Dakota and Hawai’i gathered for three days of dancing, drumming, socializing, camping, buying handicrafts, and eating frybread at the Iroquois Eatery. But most of all, the pow wow served as a potent reminder of Columbus’s legacy. Its organizer, the non-profit Redhawk Native American Arts Council, made its goal clear: “to reclaim and redefine [Columbus Day] to celebrate the rich cultures and histories of indigenous people in the Americas, rather than a day dedicated to the forced colonization of native peoples,” according to the organization’s website.
Bill Crouse, the weekend’s MC and a Seneca from the Allegany Reservation in western New York, spoke to a crowd of hundreds, emphasizing this reclamation of the national holiday that a growing list of cities, including Minneapolis and Albuquerque, have already abolished. “We are here to celebrate in spite of Columbus,” Crouse said. “Because how do you discover a place where millions of people already reside?”
Gustavo, 32, from NYC, assembled his Aztec headdress, which ended up more than five feet high. “You can’t carry this on a subway,” he said. As for Columbus Day, he said, “Celebrating Columbus Day is celebrating murder, celebrating stealing land.”
L to R: Elsa Hoover, 20, Minnesota; Michelle Crowfeather, 20, “currently Phoenix;” Kendall Harvey, 18, New Mexico. Hoover, Crowfeather and Harvey are Columbia students and members of the university’s Native American Council.
“They’re making a federal holiday to celebrate genocide, to celebrate oppression,” Crowfeather said. She is one of the lead organizers of Columbia’s Indigenous Peoples’ Day, which aims to raise support for a campus plaque in honor of the Lenni Lenape, the people who first settled the land on which Columbia now stands (and who are not currently recognized anywhere on campus).
Hoover, another organizer of Indigenous Peoples’ Day, pointed out, “It’s the only time we’re ever talked about—people don’t believe we exist, on the East Coast, particularly.” And with the international Indigenous Peoples’ Movement, she said, there’s been a new swell of awareness and support. Along with that, Hoover said, “It’s a real comfort for Native students to have a pow wow so close at hand, to be able to connect with each other.”
Vernon Chrisjohn, 75, from Malden, New York, is an Oneida craftsman and bowmaker, and was at the fair selling an array of bows. “They say Columbus discovered a new land—this is how they put it down in history—but it’s not the truth. Tell the people what was real, let them decide for themselves how they feel.”
Jeremy, 34, from Arizona, is Navajo, and wearing an Eastern Woodlands outfit. When asked for his opinion of Columbus Day, he said, “Who was that?”
Food options included buffalo chili and venison sausage.