Indianz.Com > News > Chuck Hoskin: Tell the whole story about the theft of tribal lands

Teach kids about the Oklahoma Land Run, but don’t glorify it
Monday, April 29, 2024
Cherokee Nation
In the early 1980s, one of my favorite times at Hall-Halsell elementary in Vinita was the day we re-enacted the Oklahoma Land Run of 1889.
I look back now and cringe that the Land Run was a celebratory event but glad Vinita schools abandoned the celebration years ago.
Even with the passage of time — four decades — I can remember how excited my classmates and I were. Basically, it was a fun race. We ran and we planted flags. Some teachers mentioned something or other about how Oklahoma was founded, with a focus on some land run.
If most of my classmates were like me, they paid little attention to the history lesson. We were outside. It was sunny. We were running! But whatever feelings we had about the Land Run as a historic event was not only positive; we were downright joyful about it.
Forty years later, public school celebrations of the 1889 Oklahoma Land Run are less prevalent. When the last one is held, I say good riddance.
Public school celebrations of the Land Run should end.


Chuck Hoskin Jr.
is the 18th elected Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, the largest Indian
tribe in the United States. He is only the second elected Principal Chief of the
Cherokee Nation from Vinita, the first being Thomas Buffington, who served from
1899-1903. Prior to being elected Principal Chief, Hoskin served as the tribe’s
Secretary of State. He also formerly served as a member of the Council of the
Cherokee Nation, representing District 11 for six years.
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