Press release from
United Native America
www.UnitedNativeAmerica.com
A call to stop Columbus Day from United Native America Founder Mike
Graham, reported in Indian Country News Today.
A call to stop Columbus Day
Posted: October 21, 2003
by: Wilhelm Murg / Correspondent / Indian Country Today
http://www.indiancountry.com
Click to Enlarge
Glenn Morris, co-founder of resistance protests against Columbus Day in
Denver, leads protesters up the lawn of the state capitol for the
Transform Columbus Day rally. (Photo by Brenda Norrell)
WAIANAE, Hawaii - Mike L. Graham, founder of the United Native America
group is calling for people to contact their federal and state
representatives and ask them to draft a bill to stop using taxpayer's
money to support the Columbus Day federal holiday. Graham said the
change is needed because the true history of Columbus is not being
taught in our nation's schools, where there is no mention of the
explorer's inhuman treatment of the Indian people. More than 31,000
people have signed his online petition, which also calls for
congressional and/or senate hearings to look into the racial exclusion
of Native Americans in the television, movie, news media, music, and
sports industries.
Graham talked with Indian Country Today about his proposal. Ultimately,
he wants to stop Columbus Day and start a National Indigenous Peoples
Holiday, which would include not only Native Americans from the 48
states, but the indigenous people of Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, and Puerto
Rico. "A lot of Congressmen have the disposition that the holiday list
is crammed full as it is, and they don't want to add to it," Graham
said. "We want to end Columbus Day as it is, as a federal holiday, or
completely do away with the name of it, and bring about Italian Heritage
Day, which would not be a tax paid holiday, like Oktoberfest and Saint
Patrick's Day for the German and Irish communities." Graham would also
like to start a Native American Holiday because he feels if any ethnic
group deserves a holiday in America, it's the Native people.
When asked if he would like to stop Thanksgiving, Graham laughed and
said "We get brow beat enough just for speaking Columbus' name; they
almost faint and have a heart attack. This resolution would not even
bring up the thought of changing Columbus Day to Native American Day, or
declassifying Columbus Day, so they're locked in up there. They don't
want to offend the Italian caucus in Washington, D.C."
Graham feels it is very important to have congressional hearings on the
exclusion of Native Americans in the media. He points to how few, if any
Native Americans are regularly seen on television shows (the most famous
are animated characters such as "John Redcorn" on Fox's "King of the
Hill," and "Apache Chief" on Cartoon Network's "Harvey Birdman, Attorney
at Law") while other minorities, such as the homosexual community, have
recently been embraced by Hollywood to the point of overexposure. While
the gay community makes up a significantly larger minority of the
population than Native Americans, Graham feels that the government's
near extermination of Natives does not make it right for the race to be
excluded from the media.
"We have an online petition right now, we set it up a little over a year
and a half ago, and we have close to 32,000 signatures on it calling for
the end of Columbus Day as a tax paid holiday," Graham said. "We have
incorporated other issues in that too. We're trying to get tribes to
send in petitions and resolutions to the House Resource Committee to set
up hearings on the racial exclusion of Indians in the television, movie,
and sports industry. We searched out these issues and found out that
throughout the national sports industry, even though they want to use
our heritage to 'honor' us, they don't send one scout to our Indian
schools to draft players to come on to their team. We get the double
feedback: 'We don't leave any rock unturned to find the right players
for our teams.' Well, here's the deal; there are a lot of rocks on the
Indian reservations. Our question is how many times have they sent a
talent scout down to the Indian schools?
"Scouts have been fired because African-American communities have
complained that scouts haven't come to their communities to scout for
them (according to the reports in the wake of Rush Limbaugh's recent
disparaging comments made about the Philadelphia Eagle's
African-American quarterback Donovan McNabb). That's not being done in
the American Indian community either."
Graham would like to see all states and the federal government follow
the action of South Dakota, which has changed Columbus Day to Native
American Day. Seventeen states have dropped Columbus Day as a state paid
holiday.
Congressman Joe Baca of California has introduced House Resolution 167
IH which calls for the federal government to bring about National Native
American Day. "This resolution would establish a unified national day
for the country to pay tribute toward the First Americans heritage,
history and contributions to the formation of America and its
government." For more information, or to sign the online petition, visit
unitednativeamerica.com.
www.UnitedNativeAmerica.com
Mike L. Graham
Founder United Native America
Email: mikeuna1@aol.com
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