Quote:
Originally Posted by Evang.Benincasa
Never said it was instituted to remember the genocide of the Indians.
The Wampanoag tribe was whittled down from 30,000 to 2,000 that's not genocide because 2,000 manged to survive?
I understand the whole history of how Thanksgiving became a national holiday, but what the real irony here is that the coming of the Puritan Europeans didn't bring anything to be thankful about to a people who were already living in North Eastern America. The Washington Post snippet makes everything pretty much vanilla, when the facts remain, like Columbus landing in Hispaniola which caused GENOCIDE of the Taíno Indians, the Pilgrims landing in Plymouth Massachusetts not the advent of Christian love, but death.
The Pequot, the Narraganset, and the Wampanoag all fell under the buckled shoes of the Puritans, and in time the rest of the American Indian population was next on the menu when the Europeans decided to populate the rest of the country.
Yet, I think I know what you are trying to get at with the websites you offered.
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Genocide is a systematic slaughtering of a race.
What happened to one tribe may not have been based on the attempt to slaughter them because they wanted to kill all Indians. Read the history and you'll see there was growing strife between various tribes AND the Pilgrims.
It was a war and in wars often one side loses
The Pilgrims did not wear buckles.