Local Voices
Being a Good Guest
The Thanksgiving myth has taught generations of Americans that Native People are a relic of the heroic founding of our nation.

Being a Good Guest
By: Joan Aandeg and the Committee for Indigenous Peoples Day Wellesley
The Thanksgiving myth has taught generations of Americans that Native People are a relic of the heroic founding of our nation. According to this romanticized story, friendly and helpful Indians welcomed the Pilgrims and shared this land of plenty, then conveniently disappeared.
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My name is Joan Aandeg. I am an enrolled member of the Lac Courtes Oreilles band of Lake Superior Anishinaabeg. We are relatives of the Wampanoag. I would like to share a few facts.
Indigenous Peoples have been caretaking these lands since time immemorial, and we are still here.
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We are the original free and independent people of these lands. For countless generations, we have been free and independent Nations, living in community, caretaking our lands and waterways. We are resilient and strong. We live in deeply respectful, reciprocal relationship with the beings and spirits of our world. We have our own languages and ways of speaking that encode and carry our way of life across the generations. We have deep ties with other nations going back thousands of years. We have rituals and practices that ensure the continuity of our People and our world--All Our Relations.
We have never been the “primitive” Indians of the settler mythology.
The Thanksgiving myth is harmful because it erases the truth of what was done to the Wampanoag and every other tribe after them1. There has never been friendly sharing of the land. The settlers did not know how to behave as guests in someone else’s home. The settlers have always taken what they want. They started by desecrating the graves of the Wampanoag, and they went on to desecrate an entire continent.
When one travels, it is customary to honor the practices of the host country. We are the Indigenous Peoples of this Land. We can show you how to be good relatives. Maybe that's what the Wampanoag people were trying to do so long ago when they helped the settlers survive.
What can we celebrate instead of Thanksgiving? We can celebrate Wampanoag resistance. Since 1970, Native people and allies have gathered in Plymouth on the fourth Thursday in November to commemorate a National Day of Mourning2. We can honor our Wampanoag hosts by acknowledging the truth of our shared history, and by being good guests.
Gidinawendimin. We are all related.
1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6uYWv0h6WnA&feature=youtu.be