Thursday, November 25, 2010

My Thanksgiving Shadow


I confess:  for many years I have not found it easy, as a comfortably affluent European American, to feel the deep and thorough gratitude I would like to feel at Thanksgiving.  I've tried, but not very far down I keep hitting some kind of obstacle.  This year, I was provided with two powerful and apparently contradictory texts that may point a way out of the impasse.  The first is a wonderful and profoundly true editation that was handed out at a Thanksgiving yoga class I took this morning. It is worth reading slowly, with contemplation:



"Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend. Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow." —Melody Beattie

The second was writer Alma Luz Villanueva's Thanksgiving Facebook link to a classic article I've read before, but which only really hit me today, perhaps because I recently visited St. Augustine, Florida, where the genocidal impact of the Spanish on the Timucua people was still palpable: "One indication of moral progress in the United States would be the replacement of Thanksgiving Day and its self-indulgent family feasting with a National Day of Atonement accompanied by a self-reflective collective fasting.  In fact, indigenous people have offered such a model; since 1970 they have marked the fourth Thursday of November as a Day of Mourning in a spiritual/political ceremony on Coles Hill overlooking Plymouth Rock, Mass., one of the early sites of the European invasion of the Americas.
. . . Simply put: Thanksgiving is the day when the dominant white culture (and, sadly, most of the rest of the nonwhite but non-indigenous population) celebrates the beginning of a genocide that was, in fact, blessed by the men we hold up as our heroic founding fathers." —from "No Thanks to Thanksgiving" by Robert Jensen (please read the whole of this powerful short article here).

How to reconcile these two takes on the holiday? How to open myself to gratitude and also open myself to a truth that I fear will lead to terrible shame and guilt and grief? I can't feel gratitude for the horrible sins of my European ancestors. And yet, how can I exempt such a huge part of my cultural identity from my consciousness and still expect to find the peace within myself from which gratitude arises?

Perhaps the shadow knows. A third text arrived in my life today that seems to point to an answer:   The Dark Side of the Light Chasers: Reclaiming your power, creativity, brilliance, and dreams by Debbie Ford.  Ford recounts how she faced her shadow racist self (this was a deep shadow, that of a person no-one would EVER think to call a racist, and consequently a difficult but ultimately very transformative self to connect with), and the profound and immediate—really almost miraculous—external effect of that inner work.

Our shadows consist of the parts of ourselves that we disavow and repress.  I have been having written conversation with my shadow self (I write both parts, but she definitely has her own voice) for several weeks, inspired by discussion in a therapeutic writing group I am part of at the Center for Creative Healing.  Mine was angry with me at first, perhaps because she'd been neglected for so long, but I waited that out and ended up benefiting profoundly from her insightful answers to questions and problems from all areas of my life. 

I found I could ask her anything--after all, who knows me better than my shadow? Family issues, career issues, decorating advice...she was right every time.  Now I am planning to take our relationship to a deeper level, and to see if this could be the answer, the way that i as a European American can begin to come to terms with the guilt and horror that I feel when I think about the fate of the Native American people on this continent. I am going to read Ford's book carefully and meditate on this question. I am going to see if I can honestly accept my own shadow's acquiescence in the vicious conquest of this continent, so that I may begin to move towards atonement.

That would be where the gratitude comes in; that could be the way to reconcile Beattie's truth with Jensen's truth. I have been projecting my own shadow conquerer out onto others, demonizing imperialism and militarism when I encounter them in others. But I won't be truly free of them until I encounter them within myself. Every encounter with the shadow is a potential teacher, a potential opener, and so, in the small hours of this Thanksgiving night, I give thanks for the shadow. As Ford writes, "You must go into the dark in order to bring forth your light. When we suppress any feeling or impulse, we are also suppressing its polar opposite. If we deny our ugliness, we lessen our beauty. If we deny our fear, we minimize our courage. If we deny our greed, we also reduce our generosity. Our full magnitude is more than most of us can ever imagine."


Image:  Timucua Harvest Ceremony




4 comments:

milind said...

annieji i read whole atricle. first thing that racist white people conquore indiginous people. so u confess. this thing is also applicable to Indian Brahmin (meddle asian white race)who r now in american silicon vally. but when does they do this? Indiam bramhin r more racist that european white people.

richard cambridge said...

Annie,

I'd like to echo your sentiment. I've not celebrated Thanksgiving since 1970, but have supported and attended Day of Mourning at Cole's Hill, in Plymouth, MA, where Native Peoples gather on that to bear witness to the history of their oppression and genocide, as well as their courage and endurance. Everyone is welcome to Day of Mourning, only Native People are permitted to speak. After this they "break fast" and have a traditional feast, and invite all who have attended to share with them.

The history of the event: In 1970, Wamsutta, (Frank B. James), an Aquinnah Wampanoag man, had been asked to speak at a fancy Commonwealth of Massachusetts banquet celebrating the 350th anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims. He agreed. The organizers of the dinner asked for a copy of the speech he planned to deliver. He agreed. Wamsutta was told by a representative of the Department of Commerce and Development that he would not be allowed to give the speech. The reason given was due to the fact that, "...the theme of the anniversary celebration is brotherhood and anything inflammatory would have been out of place." What they were really saying was that in this society, the truth is out of place.

Go to www.uaine.org/wmsuta.htm to view his speech.

Russell M. Peters, a Wampanoag, born and raised in Mashpee, MA, gives us this account:

"When Frank James, known to the Wampanoag people as Wampsutta, was invited to speak at the 1970 annual Thanksgiving feast [the 350th anniversary] at Plymouth, he 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 Massasoit, who as leader of the Wampanoag 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. The eight or ten Indians and their supporters listened in indignation as Frank talked of the takeover of the Wampanoag tradition, culture, religion, and land. "

I wrote this poem after Day of Mourning,1993.

Richard

When Worlds Collide

Day of Mourning, 1993

Dear Paige & Michael:

When you read this Thanksgiving will have
passed. On that day I'll be in Plymouth, MA, on the
hill where the statue of Massasoit is, above the rock
where legend has it the pilgrims landed. The Native
Peoples call it Day of Mourning. They set up a mike,
and as the Great Spirit moves, they speak what's in
their heart as the Spirit moves them.
While this is going on, just below in the street,
a parade begins. People dressed in black, cornered
hats, square-toed buckle shoes, muskets cocked on
shoulders, slowly march to the sound of fife and roll of
drums led by a modern day policeman on horseback
with a whistle sounding tweet tweet to clear the way
to the rock where they will say words over it.
If you are up on the hill you can't help but look
down, then look back; then look down and back again.
The comparison is so loud it screams. Because of
the perspective and height the marching people look
small, like three-quarter size, like, well, Hobbits. They look
so. . .harmless. Your head swims, Time folds back like
a rubber glove and Someone blows the fingers out—
POP POP! POP POP POP!
and there you are, on the hill, centuries ago—
Yes, they look so. . .harmless!
And late November never fails to bend the light
a certain slant— just so: the parade— staged, surreal.
Your nose whiffs and wrinkles. . .what is that smell?
O yes— idolatry. Some day their incense will reach
Great Spirit's nostrils. Great Spirit will judge
between the children of the original stewards and the
children of the supplanters. And forgive me, but
sometimes, when it comes together like this, and the
the light is so clear and sharp it's almost. . .cruel,
sometimes I pray to the old testament God.

Annie Finch said...

Thank you Milind. And the same thing happened to my Scottish ancestors at the hands of the English, then to the English at the hands of the French. Now that the world is becoming smaller, more connected, and more balanced between female and male energy, it may be that the time of such brutality is ending. . .

Annie Finch said...

Richard, thanks for sharing this amazing piece!