As
we delve further into our First Peoples studies, I have come to the
realization that we are still putting the pieces together in
constructing Native American history. We have been introduced to the
concept of
reflexivity, and how important it is to our research. Why is this?
Well, we know that much of what we already learned about Indigenous
Peoples was filtered through the colonial lens. This information
typically starts with Christopher Columbus and ends with
treaties and reservations…and emphasizes the accomplishments of our
white forefathers. Well what about the history
before the European invasion? More emphasis should be placed on the Indigenous People’s
history. We need to know everything about Indian culture and
sovereignty before 1492. The catch being, that much of Native American
history is oral, so we
have been spoon fed exactly what European scholars have been
teaching us in their writings for centuries. That is why I am intrigued
by this essay written by Bruce E. Johansen, which documents “one of the
world’s oldest democracies, the Haudenosaunee
(Iroquois) Confederacy” (Para 1).
Barbara
Mann and Jerry Fields, both from Toledo University, have determined
that the “Iroquois Confederacy’s body of law” (para 2) was finally
ratified by all of the five nations on August 31, 1142, which is over
300 years before 1451, as previously thought. This new finding ranks
this democracy with Iceland and Switzerland as the “oldest continuously
functioning democracy on earth” (para 4).
Wait a minute, how can we be sure that this is not some arbitrary study borne out of scholarly opinion?
Mann
is a doctoral student in American Studies, while Fields is an
astronomer. Together they studied Seneca “oral accounts and precise
solar data” (para 4), knowing "that the Senecas adopted the Iroquois
Great Law of Peace shortly after
a total eclipse of the sun" (para 5). Most historians place this in
the year 1451, when another solar eclipse occurred, however, its shadow
fell over Pennsylvania, not New York. The claim of the eclipse in 1142
also coincides with family lineages, oral accounts and archaeological
evidence. In 1948, Historian Paul Wallace proposed 1451 as the date,
based on solar eclipse data in the pre-colonial contact era. This
particular date was most likely chosen because it fit within the time
period just before the realm of European contact, so it would coincide
with the "discovery of America," and "the academic politics of the late
1940's" (para 6). Mann hilariously sums it up, stating "As
late as 1949, white scholars were still trying to insist
that Europeans . . . had invented wampum -- a back-bone artifact of the
League!" (para 6). I believe this exemplifies the dominant colonial cultural theme, and the need to rewrite history!
Johansen, Bruce E. "Dating the Iriquois Confederacy." Akewsasne Notes Series, Fall, 1995. Print.
I love how the timing was deduced for the Haudenosaunee confederacy, and how much influence this democratic format has had on the US government. I believe it would be revolutionary in a wonderful way if there was much more Native American influence in the US government.
ReplyDeletePerhaps all of the science is flawed and the Haudenosaunee confederacy was formed much earlier than either prediction----science reputably dated indigenous peoples to North America some 12,000-15,000 years ago-- do we know for certain that the "land bridge" actually worked with peoples crossing from Eastern Hemisphere to Western Hemisphere, perhaps--just perhaps-- it worked conversely to popular belief--- and the Eastern Hemisphere was actually populated by peoples from the Western Hemisphere originally---
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