Native American Heritage Month

Native American Heritage month…so much I can expound on concerning being granted a month to be recognized in a country where we have been for over 49,000 years. Not meaning to sound cynical, but I’ve witness quite a lot and I am often referred to as a strong spirit. However, the ancestors whisper “Stop and see into the future daughter, this is not about you but about those to come.” I am honored to have the privledge to put some of my thoughts to paper and hopefully it will be received well. I do not speak for the 574+ tribes and nations, I tell my own story (as they tell their own).
I would like to take this opportunity to share some of my spirit with the readers. As a child I went to public schools and was taught the fantasy of American History. I would come home and my parents would explain, this is their way of making themselves look good and being the saviors of the world. Very little of what I was taught was factual, yet I digested these as stories and regurgitated the information to graduate. Now I stand on the precipice of demanding that what is taught is either factual or make the stipulation that it is fiction. Why, because math is taught as absolute, science seeks to find truths, music is as diverse as the stars, yet American History is written and taught by “ghost writers”. Truth is not always beautiful but it is necessary for growth.
There is much to say about this month, and I know we should be grateful, yet there is something piquing within me that screams out, “We have much to do, find our missing, get water to our thirsty, shelter for others, fight for the return of the bones of our ancestors which some are displayed in museums listed as artifacts.…”
We as a people, generally live our truth and walk our truth. Though it may not be what one sees on TV or in movies, we are an ancient people of many nations and tribes. We still walk and live on “Turtle Island” and we are reawakening our languages and cultures in order to leave substance to those who are to come.
Come and learn of us, come and share with us and we will show you who we are.
Wëlànkuntëwakàn, Wanishi (Peace and Thank you)
Allie Hall
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