Opinion: Religious left refuses to celebrate 'genocidal' holiday
Posted: Monday, November 28, 2011
"America's Thanksgiving, of course, traces to the English Separatists known as Pilgrims who quit the Church of England, and England, to create their own promised land in the American wilderness. Only about half of the original 100 settlers had survived their first winter in what became Massachusetts. In the fall of 1621 they reputedly celebrated a harvest festival that included about a hundred members of the local Indian tribe, which had been very helpful to their survival.
"Most are in agreement that the Indians were invited simply because the Pilgrims knew that they would have died had it not been for the help of the local Indians," Rev. Cho unsentimentally recalled. "Those that we would now categorize as 'illegal aliens,'" i.e. the Pilgrims, "not only came without invitation but they came to take over," the clergyman grimly alleged. "In fact, beyond the first joint 'Thanksgiving,' there were no further meals of mutual peace, dependence, and friendship." In Cho's telling, Thanksgiving was just a last sort of last meal for the Indians who would later succumb to an ongoing "genocide" by Europeans of America's native peoples.
Thanksgiving is darkly the "celebration" of the "colonists'" eventual "oppression" of their "heathen captives," Cho charges. "The early arrivals of European invasion resulted in the deaths of 10 to 30 million native Indians." These figures, an unconfirmable estimate of the number of native peoples who died because of European settlement, covers several centuries, from Christopher Columbus' 1492 arrival up through, presumably, the late 19th century. The vast majority were victims of diseases brought by Europeans for which the native peoples had no immunity. In the several years prior to the Pilgrims' arrival at Cape Cod, the local tribe had lost perhaps 90 percent of its people because of possible transmission of bubonic plague by European fishermen."
Get the Story:
Mark Tooley: A 'Genocidal' Thanksgiving
(American Spectator 11/28)
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