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    Special Collections speaker sheds light on the living work of the archive – The Bowdoin Orient

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Julia Jennings"BEYOND THE READING ROOM": Literary Scholar Susan Beegel and Special Collections and Archives Education and Outreach Librarian Marieke Van Der Steenhoven (left to right) discuss the effect of one of Harriet Beecher Stowe's most popular novels on summer tourism in Maine.

    In the third installment of the Beyond the Reading Room virtual lecture series hosted by Bowdoin College Librarys George J. Mitchell Department of Special Collections and Archives (Special Collections), literary scholar Susan Beegel joined the Bowdoin community over Zoom on Monday to explore the role of Harriet Beecher Stowes novel in transforming Orrs Island from a fishing village to a summer tourist attraction. The event was open to Bowdoin students, faculty and alumni, as well as members of the Brunswick community and broader Midcoast Maine.

    Within the short span of time that Harriet Beecher Stowe spent in Brunswick during the mid-19th century, she irrevocably shaped the future of some of Maines coastal communities. Through the publication of The Pearl of Orrs Island, Stowe painted an image of mid-coast Maine so vivid that readers flocked to the Maine islands to see it for themselves.

    I think the impulse of tourism and the impulse to read are often very much the same. I mean, what are we looking for? Were looking for beautiful places, interesting experiences, to meet characters; thats what books are made of and thats what tourism is made of, Beegel said.

    The lecture specifically explored how Stowes fictitious interpretation of the Orrs Island community became a reality as community members jumped to meet the demand of tourists seeking the world that Stowe created through her work.

    Beegel, a writer whose work examines American literature and history, has utilized SC and A for her research on Stowe while also actively helping to grow the College Librarys collections of materials relating to the life and writings of Stowe.

    I grew up on an island off the coast of Maine where the population tripled in the summer, and

    so it was really fun for me to kind of make those personal connections as a viewer of her talk, Marieke Van Der Steenhoven, Special Collections and Archives education and outreach librarian and an organizer of the event, said in a Zoom interview with the Orient. I also think that the thread throughout it, which resonates with the work that we do in Special Collections, is thinking about how history is constructedand reconstructed.

    For this virtual series, Special Collections has welcomed a variety of scholars and artists, all of whom have some connection to the work of the Bowdoin Librarys collections. Previous lectures have featured Maureen Cummins, creator of artists books based on historical research, and Pamela Zabala 17, now a PhD student at Duke University, who has used archival research to contextualize racial bias incidents at Bowdoin. The final installment of the series will occur on December 3 with a lecture from Don Westfall 72 regarding his research on Bowdoins history of land acquisition in Maine.

    Through the virtual lectures, the Special Collections staff hopes to maintain engagement and build a virtual community, as well as to explore the lived impacts of materials and the dynamic nature of the archive.

    We started the series this semester [in] an attempt to try to connect Special Collections and Archives with people in the world, Van Der Steenhoven said. Normally we do programming that brings people into the reading room for hands-on or close encounters with materials, and so it seemed like a natural thing to doto move beyond the reading room and to think about how the materials and the collection have been used.

    While the lecture series has served as the main source of outreach for Special Collections and Archives this semester, Van Der Steenhoven and her colleagues have also been working with the archives behind the scenes. They have partnered with classes and worked to build the librarys digitized collection, which already contains over 300,000 materials.

    [Our work] this semester and moving forward to next semester has been a way for us to sort of leverage the existing digital collections and then also grow those collections as necessary, Van Der Steenhoven said.

    Special Collections hopes to continue offering online programming into the Spring semester, including the virtual revival of the monthly Audubon page turning. Van Der Steenhoven hopes that both the lecture series and the continued engagement with the SC and A will inspire the Bowdoin community to further consider the role of the archive and the evolution of primary sources.

    Its one example of all the exciting things that people are doing for a wide variety of different reasons, Van Der Steenhoven said. Like how people become attracted to and what they end up doing with Special Collections. Its a way to think about the active life of these materials.

    See the rest here:
    Special Collections speaker sheds light on the living work of the archive - The Bowdoin Orient

    Incident at West Valley high school sheds light on mental health toll in the pandemic – 12news.com KPNX

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    A letter from the principal at Estrella Foothills High School said in early November a student threatened to harm themselves with a gun after band practice.

    Quick action helped end a scary situation at a West Valley high school.

    A letter from the principal at Estrella Foothills High School said in early November a student threatened to harm themselves with a gun after band practice.

    Goodyear Police said another student tackled the teen and gave the gun to a teacher. All students are physically OK.

    The gun was later found by police to be unloaded and the student was taken to the hospital to be evaluated.

    It was kind of an out of left field, Andrew Glenn, director of music at Estrella Foothills High School, said.

    Glenn said the incident brought to focus a different toll of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    I think theres going to be this hidden cost that were not going to see probably for even years down the road, Glenn said.

    Arizona Department of Health Services Director Dr. Cara Christ recently said 43 teens ages 17 and under have died by suicide this year, up already from 38 in 2019.

    Calls into Teen Lifeline are also up 14% from last year.

    Glenn said as a teacher, its been harder to keep tabs on students not seeing them in person every day.

    Mentally getting over the barrier of Ive typed it and Im acknowledging that somethings wrong is definitely the barrier that we are at with the students, Glenn said.

    Paula McCall Ph.D, a child psychologist, said the pandemic is playing a big role in mental health. Not only for students who are distanced learning but those that are on campus as well.

    In-person is not what it used to be, and we have to be social distanced and masked and dont get to interact with other people the way that we had before, McCall said.

    McCall said theres no profile of suicide but the pandemic has brought more risk factors.

    A lot of our resiliency factors arent there like they were before and our coping strategies are impaired, McCall said.

    She adds its good for parents to have open, honest communication with their teens.

    We see marked sudden changes in behavior, if we see concerning extreme emotions, if we hear talk about suicide or suicidal thoughts, we need to respond to those and we need to talk about what that is, McCall said.

    If you or a loved one are experiencing suicidal thoughts, the National Suicide Prevention line is available toll-free at 1-800-273-TALK.

    Other resources available include:

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    Incident at West Valley high school sheds light on mental health toll in the pandemic - 12news.com KPNX

    Lewis Hamilton sheds light on the role Ross Brawn and Niki Lauda played in convincing him to join… – The Sportsrush

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Lewis Hamilton had to be convinced to join Mercedes by Ross Brawn and Niki Lauda, ushering the start of the most-dominant era in F1.

    Former Mercedes non-executive chairman Niki Lauda played a crucial role in getting Lewis Hamilton to Mercedes. The three-time champion Lauda also played a key role in his development once he joined in, before his untimely demise.

    Id spoken to Niki back home in Monaco, I was talking to him and he was talking to me about coming. Im pretty sure he was the first one I had spoken to. He was like, youve got to come to the team!

    Ross Brawn had won the F1 title with Jenson Button at Brawn GP and was now the team principal at Mercedes. And according to Hamilton, Brawns visit to his moms house played a crucial role in him making the switch from McLaren to Mercedes.

    I wasnt convinced necessarily at the beginning. I think the convincing stage which really made me look into it more was when Ross came around my mums house and sat with me in the kitchen. We had tea, and he showed me what the plan is for the team. That was the real in-depth insight into what the team was planning, the changes they were trying to do. That was really the selling point.

    Also read: Mercedes writing an era of unprecedented domination in Formula 1, is there an end to their seamless triumphs?

    Lewis Hamilton is an inspiration to many across the globe, with his sheer grit and determination to achieve success. Little would he have known that his ambition to become an F1 world champion would lead to him winning it 7 times. And he has a wonderful message for those who think long and hard before making a decision.

    I knew I made a good decision when I made the decision. I knew it was the right thing for me. But jeez, did I know that we would win six world titles? No.

    I think what it says is that in life, weve got to make sure that we take that leap of faith, do what you think is right for you and not what people tell you to do, and do the homework so you have the pros and cons, and then go with it. Go with it all in, whether its good or bad.

    Also read: When can Ferrari return to prominence in Formula 1, and end Mercedes unprecedented dominance?

    Continued here:
    Lewis Hamilton sheds light on the role Ross Brawn and Niki Lauda played in convincing him to join... - The Sportsrush

    Book sheds light on the tragedy of Balochistan under Pakistan – The Sunday Guardian

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    New Delhi: I was reminded of the concentration camps that were operated by the Nazis in Auschwitz as I started turning the pages of the book, Balochistan-bruised, battered and bloodied (Bloomsbury publication) authored by Italian journalist Francesca Marino.This 230-page-plus readout which will be released on 28 November, starts with tracing the ancient history of Balochistan and concludes while detailing about the numerous Chinese CPEC projects that are being executed in the region. In between these are pages that bring to light the tragic and heart-breaking stories of how the common Balochi, for decades now, have suffered in the hands of successive Pakistani governments, be it either a democratically elected PM or an army chief who has gained power through a coup.The tragedy which the Balochis are going throughwhich the author has tried to bring out for the global readersis impossible to be summarized in one book, but Marino has done her best to give her readers an immersive picture of what is happening in the land where accessibility to outsider and non-residents is very strictly monitored. However, Marinowho has extensively covered Pakistan in the pasthas been, as the books shows, able to reach out to people on the ground while drafting her book.As one moves from one chapter to the other, the words that have been used to describe the poignant situation in which the common Balochis aredevoid of any human rights whatsoeverstart weaving a series of pictures in front of you. Picture of a 10-year-old boy who is shot four times after being tortured for four days by the Pakistani military because his elder brother is a Balochi freedom fighter, pictures of Balochi women being raped as a punishment and pictures of mothers and father, broken and sitting on their doors of dilapidated houses, waiting for the return of their sons and brothers who were picked up by the military years ago, never to be heard again. It seems in the forsaken land of Balochistan, only hope is alive, rest everything has been taken away by the Pakistani rulers.The book also has a collage of black and white photographsthat were clicked by a local photographer, Roshaan Khattak, while keeping his life at stake, depicting the Balochis and their lives. These picturesadd more pain to the sad tale that Balochistan is right now. The term missing persons might come as a shock to most readers, but in Balochistan, it is a part of life, and so are mass graves and mutilated bodies lying on the road side, bodies of those poor souls who are picked by the Paksitani military and death squads that function under the patronage of the Pakistan army. The present-day reality of Balochistan is hidden, depressing and saddening and the latter two emotions stay with you long after you have given this book a rest.The reason for that is that the human mind is not conditioned to accept that such atrocities, trampling of even basic human rights like right to life, are still taking place. The book also raises, at some point, the relevance of international human rights agencies asthey have failed, for years now, to give even a cursory look at what the people of Balochistan are facing every day.The book has managed to explain the past and the present reasons that have put the Balochis and their land in such a pitiful state. And it has also, perhaps rightfully so, stayed away from predicting the future. For the future of the Balochis, as was the past, looks an ending tale of depth of sorrow and death.Balochistan, bruised, battered and bloodied is not a leisure reading, but a book that extracts empathy from its reader.

    Excerpt from:
    Book sheds light on the tragedy of Balochistan under Pakistan - The Sunday Guardian

    Don’t leave it to the last minute; get that calf shed cleaned out for spring now – Agriland

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    With farmers already starting to dry off some of their herd. It wont be long until the milking season is over and cows are off on their holidays.

    Generally, spring-calving herds aim to calve down in around the start of February. However, in many cases, calving always starts sooner than that, with many cows calving in mid-January.

    December 1 is just around the corner. So, for many farms, you are looking at a six-to-eight week window before calving starts.

    The last thing you want to be doing is cleaning out a calf shed a few days before calving. Get ahead of yourself and put it on your to-do list over the coming weeks.

    Depending on how many cows you are milking and the level of help you have on the farm, a window of opportunity could present itself over the next while to tackle the calf shed and get it organised for spring.

    In terms of cleaning the shed, ensure all of the dung from the shed is removed and stored in a dung stead, where any run-off can be collected and stored.

    The power-washer should be brought into action and the entire shed should be thoroughly cleaned from head to toe.

    Once the shed is washed, open up the door(s) of the shed and allow it to dry out fully. The last thing we want is to be letting calves into a damp shed next spring.

    Once the shed has been allowed to dry out, we can then look to getting the individual and group pens set up and ready for use.

    Its no harm to clean out the water troughs now and again before calves are being housed. As well as that, getting any calf rearing equipment cleaned, and replaced if broken, should also be on the to-do list over the next few weeks.

    It is important farmers keep in mind the importance of good ventilation in their calf sheds.

    Over the course of the year, dust particles or hay and straw that are stored in the sheds can block up the air outlets in the Yorkshire boarding or in the vented sheeting in the shed.

    Therefore, it is important that these outlets are clear and allow for air to come through unaffected.

    If the warm air, that builds up in the shed, has nowhere to escape then animal health problems are more than likely going to occur which will have a negative impact on animal performance.

    The importance of removing stale air, odour, pathogens and viruses by allowing the inward movement of fresh, clean air into a shed cannot be underestimated.

    Therefore, take the time to inspect your calf shed to see if any air outlets are blocked up or if any alterations need to be made to increase or decrease the amount of air coming into the shed.

    RELATED STORIES

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    Don't leave it to the last minute; get that calf shed cleaned out for spring now - Agriland

    Are E-cigarettes Safer Than Cigarettes? Study Sheds Light on the Issue – Newswise

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Newswise Scientists and medical professionals have long debated whether pod e-cigarettes are a safer alternative to traditional cigarettes. A new study provides some insight.

    In a collaboration between The University of Kansas Cancer Center, California State University San Marcos and Brown University, scientists conducted a six-week-long randomized trial comparing e-cigarette use to traditional cigarette use in African American and Latinx smokers. E-cigarettes simulate tobacco smoke via battery-powered devices that work by heating a liquid into a vapor that the user inhales.

    Nikki Nollen, PhD, co-program leader of KU Cancer Centers Cancer Prevention and Control research program, served as site principal investigator.

    Fourth generation e-cigarettes contain high concentrations of nicotine and other appealing features that may support switching and reduce potential health risks among those who smoke combustible cigarettes, Dr. Nollen said. We wanted to examine the biomarkers of exposure in both groups and determine the risk-benefit tradeoff of e-cigarettes.

    Those who switched to e-cigarettes experienced a significant reduction in a certain biomarker called NNAL. When NNK, a tobacco-specific lung carcinogen is metabolized, it converts to NNAL, indicating the bodys exposure to tobacco products. E-cigarette users also experienced a dramatic drop in carbon monoxide and self-reported respiratory symptoms. Nicotine exposure, lung function and blood pressure remained unchanged.

    What was most surprising was the magnitude of change experienced by those in the e-cigarette group, Dr. Nollen said. They reduced their NNAL by 64%, carbon monoxide by 47% and respiratory symptoms by 37% compared to those in the control group who continued to smoke cigarettes as usual.

    Dr. Nollen and the team were also surprised to witness that a complete switch to e-cigarettes was not needed to achieve benefits. Those in the e-cigarette group who only partially switched i.e., became dual users of both cigarettes and e-cigarettes also experienced reductions in NNAL, carbon monoxide and respiratory symptoms, though to a lesser degree than those who made a complete switch.

    The findings of the clinical study the first such trial to examine fourth-generation salt-based nicotine e-cigarettes were published in JAMA Network Open.

    Improving disparities

    To recruit participants for the study, Dr. Nollen and her team leaned on a 20-year partnership with Swope Health Services Central, a federally qualified health center located in Kansas City, Missouri. More than 85% of Swopes patient population is African American. KU Cancer Center members have teamed up with Swope on 10 studies over the last two decades.

    Overall, African Americans and Latinxs tend to smoke less compared to other ethnicities, but they are more likely to develop and die from tobacco-related health issues. The two minorities have largely been underrepresented in e-cigarette studies. Excluding these groups from such studies only worsen the uneven burden of tobacco-related deaths and disease they experience.

    According to Dr. Nollen, longer studies must be conducted in order to understand the long-term effects of e-cigarettes, but this study may serve as a springboard for additional research endeavors.

    Quitting cigarettes is the priority, Dr. Nollen said. But for those unwilling or unable, our findings support using e-cigarettes as a harm reduction strategy for African American and Latinx smokers who experience significant tobacco-related health disparities.

    Read this article:
    Are E-cigarettes Safer Than Cigarettes? Study Sheds Light on the Issue - Newswise

    F1 2021 Calendar: Outgoing F1 CEO Chase Carey sheds light on the number of potential races in the upcoming… – The Sportsrush

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    F1 2021 Calendar: Outgoing F1 CEO Chase Carey has dropped hints on the number of potential races in the upcoming seasons.

    The 2021 F1 Calendar is the longest in the sports history, with 23 races. Venues of all but one have been confirmed, down to the first-ever Vietnamese GP being scrapped. Asked whether 23 is a magic number for the number of races, F1 CEO Chase Carey replied in the negative.

    I dont think theres a magic number. The capacity for races is obviously limited. I dont know that youd say there is a magic number that you dont go past, but we recommend 23 is a full calendar. We felt it was the right thing to have in place next year. We expect to have those 23 events next year and with fans. Really, every one of the promoters on that calendar expects to do the same.

    Also read: F1 2021 Calendar: Which races have made it to the longest ever F1 Calendar in history?

    The Covid-19 pandemic ensured that the current season was shortened, with 17 races ultimately making it to the calendar. It took a great effort from all the stakeholders to make it a reality. And Carey still is choosing not to undermine the uncertainly that presents the sport next season too.

    But we recognize we still have a period of uncertainty in front of us. The world is moving to a place where we have to figure out how to move forward with this virus, not shut down because of it. That said, weve all still got to navigate through it, so we feel good about it but we know we have a period of uncertainty in front of us.

    Also read: Asian triple-header will take a toll on people- Mercedes team principal shows concern over hectic 2021 schedule

    Continue reading here:
    F1 2021 Calendar: Outgoing F1 CEO Chase Carey sheds light on the number of potential races in the upcoming... - The Sportsrush

    Boys plant business helps family move from shed to apartment during COVID-19 – New York Post

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    In the midst of hardships during the coronavirus pandemic, one 8-year-old boy has been able to dramatically change his familys life all because of his business.

    Aaron Moreno, from East Los Angeles, started selling plants for his business, Aarons Garden, in June, after his single mom, Berenice Pacheco, lost her job because of the pandemic, KABC reported.

    When Moreno started Aarons Garden, his family had only $12 left and they were living in a shed, according to a GoFundMe page set up by a family friend to support the business.

    Now, Moreno and his mom have been able to buy a car, move into an apartment and bring Morenos older sister back to the U.S. from Mexico.

    But it was a long road to get there. Pacheco and Moreno had been homeless before they moved between various shelters and homes, finally settling on a shed for several months

    Morenos 10-year-old sister, Ayleen Pacheco, had been living in Mexico with her grandparents since 2018 because of the familys financial difficulties.

    When he started Aarons Garden, Moreno didnt only want to help support his family. He also wanted to buy his own Hot Cheetos without having to ask his mom for money, the GoFundMe said.

    He was certainly able to do that and much more.

    Since it was started with a $1,000 goal in June to raise money for Aarons plant company, the GoFundMe has raised $37,075.

    I never thought we would accomplish and come this farwe couldnt believe that we got a house, Pacheco told KABC. I admire him for everything he has been able to do that I havent as a mom.

    Hes just been doing everything for us, Pacheco added later. And hes like the man of the house.

    Original post:
    Boys plant business helps family move from shed to apartment during COVID-19 - New York Post

    This kid’s love of Cheetos led him to start a business that helped his family move from a shed into an apartment – CNN

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    But for his mom -- who is undocumented, single and struggling to make ends meet -- it wasn't always easy to buy Aaron his favorite snack.

    That's what inspired the 8-year-old to start selling plants in East Los Angeles. The small project quickly transformed into a business that helped his family of four move from a shed into an apartment.

    "When I lost both my jobs in March because of the coronavirus pandemic and we had no option but to live in a shed, this kid was always asking for Hot Cheetos," Berenice Pacheco, Aaron's mom, told CNN. "It's just $3, but when you have kids and you don't have a job, it can make all the difference."

    Aaron -- who wanted to help his mom, and score some snacks -- used Pacheco's last $12 to buy succulents, which he sold to neighbors for a small profit.

    Initially, he celebrated his success with a trip to the ice cream shop -- but he realized a small business could be his family's way out of poverty.

    "Our shed was hot and crowded and I wasn't happy," Aaron told CNN. "I started my garden so my mom won't be stressed because I don't like seeing her struggle."

    Every day for months, Aaron and his mom would wake up at 6:00 am to take the bus to the flower district and search for plants his customers might like. Some days he sold them from his shed, while other days he staged a pop-up shop.

    "Before he started this we really only had things like tuna to eat, because we didn't have a kitchen and we could only cook by putting a small electric stove on a chair outside," Pacheco said. "But then his garden saved us. The money from the GoFundMe and Aaron's Garden allowed us to buy a car, which we didn't have for four years."

    On November 1, the family finally moved into a new apartment, where Aaron runs his business from the garage.

    Bringing his sister back from Mexico

    The money raised through Aaron's Garden and GoFundMe didn't just move the family into a new home -- it reunited them.

    At one of the pop-up shops, a man donated $1,000, which Aaron used to bring his 10-year-old sister Ayleen Pacheco home.

    Before moving into the shed, the family had bounced between homeless and domestic violence shelters. In 2018, Pacheco sent Ayleen to live with her family in Mexico due to their financial struggles.

    "The best part of what Aaron has done for us is bringing back his sister," Pacheco said. "It was so hard being without her and we are a whole family again. And I was so happy to see they still had their amazing bond even if they spent so much time apart. It's such a blessing."

    Together, with their 2-year-old sister Alani, the family is finally complete and looking forward to what's next.

    "Imagine four sleeping in one bed," Pacheco said. "I really don't know how we did it. It was the hardest thing to put my children through."

    "As an undocumented person, I didn't have many laws to protect me. When I lost my jobs, I didn't get a stimulus, I didn't get unemployment. I was on my own and I would stay up at night trying not to cry so my kids wouldn't hear me. I wanted to sleep my life through."

    But now, Pacheco said her family is "full of hope" and ready to start a new chapter. As for Aaron, he doesn't miss a day without buying himself a bag of Flamin' Hot Cheetos.

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    This kid's love of Cheetos led him to start a business that helped his family move from a shed into an apartment - CNN

    Not all Native Americans celebrate Thanksgiving. Find out why. – Fall River Herald News

    - November 23, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Jessica Hill|Cape Cod Times

    Back in 1970 asthe 350th anniversary of the Pilgrim landing approached, Frank James,a member of theWampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah),was invited by Gov. Frank Sargent to write and give a speech at the ceremony.

    But when James shared his speech with state officials, he was toldit was too aggressive and extreme. Then they asked him toread a statement written by a public relations professional.

    James refused.

    In his speech, James compared the white culture and the Native culture, how one conquered and pillagedand the otherwas enslaved or forced to assimilate. Onethought it must control life and profit off it, and the other believed life was to be enjoyed because nature decreed it. Onewas portrayed as organized and disciplined, and the other as savage and uncivilized.

    We, the Wampanoag, welcomed you, the white man, with open arms, little knowing that it was the beginning of the end, James wrote, that before 50 years were to pass, the Wampanoag would no longer be a free people.

    The censorship angered local Native people andhelped sparkthe creation in 1970 of the National Day of Mourning a gathering held every Thanksgiving on Coles Hill in Plymouth to honor indigenousancestors and the struggles that Native people face today.

    That just further fueled the fire that after all these years, youre still trying to filter what we say, said David Weeden, tribal historic preservation officer for the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe about James being censored. Youre still trying to paint the actual history and tell a version of history, of what happened, reluctant to acknowledge the fact that Native Americans are still notbeingtreated equally or justly or not have a fair shake.

    Even before James, who died in 2001at the age of 77,was censored,Weeden's father, Everett "Tall Oak" Weeden,had watched Native people demanding civil rights and recognition in other parts of the countryin the late 1960s.

    Indigenous civil rights organizationsdemanded recognition and raised awareness abouttheinjustices taking place in several places around the country in thelate 60s and early 70s. In November 1969, "Indians of All Tribes"occupied Alcatraz Island offSan Francisco for 19 months.

    In 1970, demands that Mount Rushmore be returned to the Sioux led to a group of Native American activists climbing the mountain and occupying it for months.

    With this as the backdrop, around the same time James was censored, Tall Oak, a decedent of both Mashantucket Pequot and Wampanoag,traveled to Connecticut for a gathering of Native Americans. While therehe approached his friend James Fraser, who is Cherokee and Edisto, to discuss what happened to James.

    As they sat in Tall Oaksblue Volkswagen bug, theybrainstormed ways to put a national spotlight on the eastern tribes and the injustices they faced.

    Tall Oak, now 84, and Fraser, now 91,sought out four other Native Americans to help with the planning, and together they organized the first Day of National Mourning 50 years ago.

    James, who taught music at Nauset Regional High School, Gary Parker, Shirley Mills, Rayleen Beyalong with Fraser andTallOakgathered multiple times to plan.

    The six originally planned their gatheringfor Jamestown, Virginia, but later decided to hold itin Plymouth, where the Mayflower landedand a statue of Ousamequin, also known as Massasoit, which means,"Great Sachem,"stands looking over Plymouth Harbor.

    The grouporganized different speakers and developed a list of different issues to discuss. They also spread the word across the country and arranged lodging for people who planned to attend the event.

    Their biggest objective was to make sure the event was peaceful, Fraser said. No threatening or fighting words would be spoken.

    It was the intent of the initial six of us that our observance on Thanksgiving would be a solemn occasion to bring attention to the eastern Native people that are still here, said Fraser, who lives in Lexington.

    Part of their mission was to enhance relationships between Native and non-Native people onCape Cod, Fraser said. The event would have no ethnocentrism, no discussion of one culture being better than another. It would teach acceptance and cultural appreciation, he said.

    The first National Day of Mourning was held onThanksgiving of 1970. Almost 500 Native Americans from across the country gathered at the statue of Massasoit. James gave a keynote speech, which wasmore tempered than the original speech he had prepared to give at the 350th anniversary of the Pilgrims landing, Fraser said. They wanted a peaceful event that would inspire a connection between Natives and non-Natives.

    It was thought that all hell was going to break loose at the first National Day of Mourning, Fraser said. There were undercover police officers. And there were cameras going, capturing pictures of those who had gathered.

    Fraser remembers walking around the parking lot and seeing license plates from Arizona, New Mexico, Virginia and North Carolina. He walked around while people were eating and did a head count, and stoppedat 477 people.

    It turned out to be a very lovely day, he said.

    The National Day of Mourning is still held every year in Plymouth on Coles Hill. On Thursday, Nov. 26, people will gather for the 50th year and march through the historic district of Plymouth.

    Fraser said both he and Tall Oak, who lives in Charlestown, Rhode Island, no longer attend the yearly event. But Fraser helped with an exhibit that the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C., is planning for the National Day of Mourning, although COVID-19 delayed the preparation, Fraser said. A movie is also in the works.

    David Weeden remembers going to the National Day of Mourning as a child.

    It was all Natives in the early period and there was a lot of solidarity, he said. It felt good to be there.

    In the early days the event would focus specifically to injustices Native Americans in the New England region faced, he said, but it now involves a wide range of issues, such as the environment and climate change.

    Thoseissuesthat Native Americans first discussed 50 years ago at the statue of Massasoit are the same ones tribes are fighting for today. They fight for their aboriginal rights, the ability to hunt and fish, and to keep their sovereignty, Weeden said.

    The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, for example, continues to fight to keep its land in trust and thereservation it established after officially receiving federal recognition in 2007, he said.

    The discomfort that non-Natives felt from James' speech in the '70s also carries on today. Weeden said when Native Americans start talking about issues that are relevant to them today, the more privileged members of society get uncomfortable, wanting them to tone down their feelings.

    Acknowledging that wrongs have been done is the first part of healing, Weeden said, and until wrongs are acknowledged and responsibilities have been taken for those wrongs and injustices, youre just perpetuating whats already been done.

    Despite this,one of the original goals of the National Day of Mourning was to find a connection and peace between Natives and non-Natives.

    James original speech also ended on a hopeful, uplifting message.

    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.

    Contact Jessica Hill at jhill@capecodonline.com. Follow her on Twitter: @jess_hillyeah

    Read this article:
    Not all Native Americans celebrate Thanksgiving. Find out why. - Fall River Herald News

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