When
Frank
James (1923 -
February 20, 2001),
known to the Wampanoag
people as Wampsutta,
was invited to speak
by the Commonwealth of
Massachusettsat the
1970 annual
Thanksgiving feast at
Plymouth. When the
text of Mr. James’
speech, a powerful
statement of anger at
the history of
oppression of the
Native people of
America, became known
before the event, the
Commonwealth
"disinvited" him.
Wampsutta was not
prepared to have his
speech revised by the
Pilgrims. He left the
dinner and the
ceremonies and went to
the hill near the
statue of the
Massasoit, who as the
leader of the
Wampanoags when the
Pilgrims landed in
their territory. There
overlooking Plymouth
Harbor, he looked at
the replica of the
Mayflower. It was
there that he gave his
speech that was to be
given to the Pilgrims
and their guests.
There eight or ten
Indians and their
supporters listened in
indignation as Frank
talked of the takeover
of the Wampanoag
tradition, culture,
religion, and land.
That
silencing of a strong
and honest Native
voice led to the
convening of the
National Day of
Mourning. The
following is the text
of 1970 speech by
Wampsutta, an Aquinnah
Wampanoag elder and
Native American
activist.
I
speak to you as a man -- a
Wampanoag Man. I am a proud man,
proud of my ancestry, my
accomplishments won by a strict
parental direction ("You must
succeed - your face is a
different color in this small
Cape Cod community!"). I am a
product of poverty and
discrimination from these two
social and economic diseases. I,
and my brothers and sisters,
have painfully overcome, and to
some extent we have earned the
respect of our community. We are
Indians first - but we are
termed "good citizens."
Sometimes we are arrogant but
only because society has
pressured us to be so.
It
is with mixed emotion that I
stand here to share my thoughts.
This is a time of celebration
for you - celebrating an
anniversary of a beginning for
the white man in America. A time
of looking back, of reflection.
It is with a heavy heart that I
look back upon what happened to
my People.
Even
before the Pilgrims landed it
was common practice for
explorers to capture Indians,
take them to Europe and sell
them as slaves for 220 shillings
apiece. The Pilgrims had hardly
explored the shores of Cape Cod
for four days before they had
robbed the graves of my
ancestors and stolen their corn
and beans. Mourt's Relation
describes a searching party of
sixteen men. Mourt goes on to
say that this party took as much
of the Indians' winter
provisions as they were able to
carry.
Massasoit,
the
great Sachem of the Wampanoag,
knew these facts, yet he and his
People welcomed and befriended
the settlers of the Plymouth
Plantation. Perhaps he did this
because his Tribe had been
depleted by an epidemic. Or his
knowledge of the harsh oncoming
winter was the reason for his
peaceful acceptance of these
acts. This action by Massasoit
was perhaps our biggest mistake.
We, the Wampanoag, welcomed you,
the white man, with open arms,
little knowing that it was the
beginning of the end; that
before 50 years were to pass,
the Wampanoag would no longer be
a free people.
What
happened in those short 50
years? What has happened in the
last 300 years? History gives us
facts and there were atrocities;
there were broken promises - and
most of these centered around
land ownership. Among ourselves
we understood that there were
boundaries, but never before had
we had to deal with fences and
stone walls. But the white man
had a need to prove his worth by
the amount of land that he
owned. Only ten years later,
when the Puritans came, they
treated the Wampanoag with even
less kindness in converting the
souls of the so-called
"savages." Although the Puritans
were harsh to members of their
own society, the Indian was
pressed between stone slabs and
hanged as quickly as any other
"witch."
And
so down through the years there
is record after record of Indian
lands taken and, in token,
reservations set up for him upon
which to live. The Indian,
having been stripped of his
power, could only stand by and
watch while the white man took
his land and used it for his
personal gain. This the Indian
could not understand; for to
him, land was survival, to farm,
to hunt, to be enjoyed. It was
not to be abused. We see
incident after incident, where
the white man sought to tame the
"savage" and convert him to the
Christian ways of life. The
early Pilgrim settlers led the
Indian to believe that if he did
not behave, they would dig up
the ground and unleash the great
epidemic again.
The
white man used the Indian's
nautical skills and abilities.
They let him be only a seaman --
but never a captain. Time and
time again, in the white man's
society, we Indians have been
termed "low man on the totem
pole."
Has
the Wampanoag really
disappeared? There is still an
aura of mystery. We know there
was an epidemic that took many
Indian lives - some Wampanoags
moved west and joined the
Cherokee and Cheyenne. They were
forced to move. Some even went
north to Canada! Many Wampanoag
put aside their Indian heritage
and accepted the white man's way
for their own survival. There
are some Wampanoag who do not
wish it known they are Indian
for social or economic reasons.
What
happened to those Wampanoags who
chose to remain and live among
the early settlers? What kind of
existence did they live as
"civilized" people? True, living
was not as complex as life
today, but they dealt with the
confusion and the change.
Honesty, trust, concern, pride,
and politics wove themselves in
and out of their [the
Wampanoags'] daily living.
Hence, he was termed crafty,
cunning, rapacious, and dirty.
History
wants us to believe that the
Indian was a savage, illiterate,
uncivilized animal. A history
that was written by an
organized, disciplined people,
to expose us as an unorganized
and undisciplined entity. Two
distinctly different cultures
met. One thought they must
control life; the other believed
life was to be enjoyed, because
nature decreed it. Let us
remember, the Indian is and was
just as human as the white man.
The Indian feels pain, gets
hurt, and becomes defensive, has
dreams, bears tragedy and
failure, suffers from
loneliness, needs to cry as well
as laugh. He, too, is often
misunderstood.
The
white man in the presence of the
Indian is still mystified by his
uncanny ability to make him feel
uncomfortable. This may be the
image the white man has created
of the Indian; his "savageness"
has boomeranged and isn't a
mystery; it is fear; fear of the
Indian's temperament!
High
on a hill, overlooking the famed
Plymouth Rock, stands the statue
of our great Sachem, Massasoit.
Massasoit has stood there many
years in silence. We the
descendants of this great Sachem
have been a silent people. The
necessity of making a living in
this materialistic society of
the white man caused us to be
silent. Today, I and many of my
people are choosing to face the
truth. We ARE Indians!
Although
time has drained our culture,
and our language is almost
extinct, we the Wampanoags still
walk the lands of Massachusetts.
We may be fragmented, we may be
confused. Many years have passed
since we have been a people
together. Our lands were
invaded. We fought as hard to
keep our land as you the whites
did to take our land away from
us. We were conquered, we became
the American prisoners of war in
many cases, and wards of the
United States Government, until
only recently.
Our
spirit refuses to die. Yesterday
we walked the woodland paths and
sandy trails. Today we must walk
the macadam highways and roads.
We are uniting We're standing
not in our wigwams but in your
concrete tent. We stand tall and
proud, and before too many moons
pass we'll right the wrongs we
have allowed to happen to us.
We
forfeited our country. Our lands
have fallen into the hands of
the aggressor. We have allowed
the white man to keep us on our
knees. What has happened cannot
be changed, but today we must
work towards a more humane
America, a more Indian America,
where men and nature once again
are important; where the Indian
values of honor, truth, and
brotherhood prevail.
You
the white man are celebrating an
anniversary. We the Wampanoags
will help you celebrate in the
concept of a beginning. It was
the beginning of a new life for
the Pilgrims. Now, 350 years
later it is a beginning of a new
determination for the original
American: the American Indian.
There
are some factors concerning the
Wampanoags and other Indians
across this vast nation. We now
have 350 years of experience
living amongst the white man. We
can now speak his language. We
can now think as a white man
thinks. We can now compete with
him for the top jobs. We're
being heard; we are now being
listened to. The important point
is that along with these
necessities of everyday living,
we still have the spirit, we
still have the unique culture,
we still have the will and, most
important of all, the
determination to remain as
Indians. We are determined, and
our presence here this evening
is living testimony that this is
only the beginning of the
American Indian, particularly
the Wampanoag, to regain the
position in this country that is
rightfully ours.