Most west suburban schools still celebrating Columbus Day, not “Indigenous Peoples”

Most west suburban schools still celebrating Columbus Day, not “Indigenous Peoples”
Superintendents Griff Powell of Oak Park District 97 and Kevin Suchinski of Hillside District 93 both refer to Columbus Day as "Indigenous Peoples Day" on their district calendars — Oak Park District 97 / Hillside District 93
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An analysis of 37 west suburban school district calendars found just one– Hinsdale High School District 86– was in session Monday, Oct. 10, the official federal holiday to celebrate Italian explorer Christopher Columbus.

The rest took the day off, mostly to pay tribute to Columbus, who first earned the distinction of a national day of observance in 1892, 400 years after his landing in America in 1492. 

That landing spurred centuries of exploration on the American continents, as well as the settlements there that became the United States of America. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt finally made Columbus Day a federal holiday in 1934. But it was a general holiday in Chicago long previous on account of the city’s large Italian population, whose patriotism it was created to recognize.

Most west suburban school districts analyzed– 23 of the 37 (62 percent)–  acknowledged on their school calendars that Oct. 11 was Columbus Day. 

An additional six– Bloomingdale 13, Willowbrook Gower 62, Hinsdale 181, La Grange Highlands 106, Lyons 204, and Berwyn South 100– said their schools were closed for Columbus Day, but that they would ask students to also honor “Indigenous Peoples.”

“Indigenous Peoples” is a play on words referring to the Indians who lived in America before European settlers arrived. The plural of person isn’t “peoples” but “people,” an irregular plural noun like “geese” or “women.”

The calendars of four districts analyzed– Hillside 93, Oak Park 97, Berwyn 98 and Westmont 101– said their schools would be closed, not to honor Columbus but only to honor so-called “Indigenous Peoples.” 

Hillside 93 re-named Columbus Day “Indigenous Day.” Oak Park 97 called it “Indgenous Peoples'” day, showing possession.

Three districts– River Forest 90, Downers Grove 99 and Villa Park Salt Creek 48– just reported their schools would be closed, and that students would honor no one.

In 1992, on the 500th anniversary of Columbus’ arrival in America, Chicago Tribune columnist William Pfaff wrote that “revisionist judgments on Columbus that have soured the observance of this anniversary. He has, by many, been turned into a figure of aggression and genocide. The larger argument made is that the Western tradition itself is oppressive, and that Columbus, its agent, was a willing accomplice in a criminal affair.”

“It is possible to believe this only if one totally lacks historical imagination, or acquaintance with 15th Century European assumptions,” Pfaff wrote. “It judges Columbus by an anachronistic 20th Century American political standard, itself narrower, and more naive, than the standards of Columbus` time. It commits the elementary error of deriving intentions from results, as if Columbus and his contemporaries were capable of imagining or intending the titanic consequences of their actions.”

Columbus arrival in America triggered “a collision of civilizations, with victory to the one which was technologically and intellectually advanced, possessing total confidence in its beliefs and its destiny,” Pfaff wrote.

On Oct. 8, President Joe Biden proclaimed Oct. 11, 2021 as “Indigenous People’s Day,” stating that “we honor America’s first inhabitants and… Tribal Nations.”

On Columbus Day itself, Biden issued a statement that declared European exploration of America “ushered in a wave of devastation” including “violence” and displacement.”

The Illinois Indian confederation, after whom the state is named, lived in the Chicagoland area and across northern Illinois in the 1600’s, where they were in a state of constant war with the Dakota Sioux, Fox and Iroquois tribes, rivals who raided their villages and tortured and murdered their members. 

The Illinois were eventually driven out of northern Illinois by the Potawatomi, who were themselves driven out of Michigan by the Iroquois.

An alliance with French settlers helped the Illinois Indians survive, though they eventually all left the state in the 1830’s.

In May, Cook County Commissioner Stanley Moore demanded Indian tribes “acknowledge their role in the rich history of Black slaves” before he would support a measure to change Columbus Day in the county to “Indigenous Peoples Day.”

Moore also claimed he is a descendant of the Choctaw Indians, who once lived in Alabama, Florida, Mississippi and Louisiana– and that he had demanded tribal membership and a share of casino profits but was denied.

Does you west suburban school district celebrate Columbus Day?

District School? Columbus
Day
 
“Indigenous Peoples” Neither Both
Addison 4 OFF    X
Bellwood 88 OFF    X
Berkeley 87 OFF    X
Berwyn 98 OFF X
Berwyn South 100 OFF X
Bloomingdale 13 OFF X
Butler 53 OFF    X
Cicero 99 OFF    X
Downers Grove 58 OFF    X
Downers Grove 99 OFF X
Elmhurst 205 OFF    X
Elmwood Park 401 OFF    X
Franklin Park 84 OFF    X
Gower 62 OFF X
Hillside 93 OFF X
Hinsdale 181 OFF X
Hinsdale 86 ON
Komarek 94 OFF    X
LaGrange 102 OFF    X
LaGrange 105 OFF    X
Lagrange Highlands 106 OFF X
Leyden 212 OFF    X
Lyons 103 OFF    X
Lyons 204 OFF X
Mannheim 83 OFF    X
Maywood-Melrose Park 89 OFF    X
Morton 201 OFF    X
Oak Park 97 OFF X
Pleasantdale 107 OFF    X
Proviso 209 OFF    X
River Forest 90 OFF X
Riverside 96 OFF    X
Rosemont 78 OFF    X
Salt Creek 48 OFF X
Union Ridge 86 OFF    X
Western Springs 101 OFF    X
Westmont 201 OFF X

Source: School web sites



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