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  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, The University of Montana

President Trump evoked the Wounded Knee massacre in a recent tweet. He was reacting to an Instagram video that Sen. Elizabeth Warren posted on New Year’s Eve.

There’s been considerable criticism[1] of the president’s inaccurate portrayal of Native American history, including from members of his own party. Two Republican senators from South Dakota, Mike Rounds and John Thune, spoke out against[2] the tweet.

Wounded Knee is among the worst massacres in Native American history. It was also one of the most violent examples of the repression of indigenous religion in American history.

Religious suppression

Religion historian Tisa Wenger[3] explains that before the 20th century, many Americans believed[4] that “indigenous practices were by definition savage, superstitious and coercive.” They did not consider them to be religion.

In part because of this belief, the U.S. government decided not to recognize Native Americans as citizens of sovereign governments in the 19th century, but as colonial subjects. In 1883, the Department of Interior enacted the first “Indian Religious Crimes Code” making the practice of Native American religions illegal[5]. These codes remained in place until 1934.

In response, Wenger writes, some Native American groups tried to convince government agents[6] that their gatherings were places of “prayer and worship” similar to Christian churches. Others claimed that their gathering were “social,” not religious.

But this kind of masking of religious practices did not stop the U.S. government from using violence to suppress these Native American ceremonies.

In 1890, the U.S. military shot and killed hundreds of unarmed men, women and children at Wounded Knee[7], South Dakota, in an effort to suppress a Native American religious ceremony called the “ghost dance.”

Historian Louis Warren[8] explains that the ghost dance[9] developed as a religious practice in the late 19th century after Native Americans witnessed the devastating environmental change of their homelands from American settlement. The dance envisioned a return to their unspoiled natural world.

The U.S. military, however, viewed it differently. They believed the Native Americans at Wounded Knee were gathering for war.

Trump's reference to Wounded Knee evokes the dark history of suppression of indigenous religions Survivors of the 1890 Wounded Knee Creek massacre in South Dakota arrived in Washington on March 4, 1938. AP Photo[10]

The darkest moment

The U.S. government changed its policies of openly suppressing indigenous religions in 1934. But it would take another 44 years before the U.S. fully committed “to protect and preserve” religious rights of American Indians through the American Indian Religious Freedom Act[11] in 1978.

As a Native American scholar of religion and environment history, I agree with Republican Sen. Mike Rounds – the Wounded Knee massacre “should never be used as a punchline.”[12][13]

References

  1. ^ considerable criticism (www.nytimes.com)
  2. ^ spoke out against (thehill.com)
  3. ^ Tisa Wenger (divinity.yale.edu)
  4. ^ many Americans believed (www.uncpress.org)
  5. ^ Native American religions illegal (www.uncpress.org)
  6. ^ Native American groups tried to convince government agents (www.journals.uchicago.edu)
  7. ^ Wounded Knee (www.nebraskapress.unl.edu)
  8. ^ Louis Warren (history.ucdavis.edu)
  9. ^ ghost dance (www.hachettebookgroup.com)
  10. ^ AP Photo (www.apimages.com)
  11. ^ American Indian Religious Freedom Act (www.fedcenter.gov)
  12. ^ a Native American scholar (www.rosalynlapier.com)
  13. ^ “should never be used as a punchline.” (thehill.com)

Authors: Rosalyn R. LaPier, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, The University of Montana

Read more http://theconversation.com/trumps-reference-to-wounded-knee-evokes-the-dark-history-of-suppression-of-indigenous-religions-109924

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