The first Americans - when and how did the Native Americans and Alaska Natives arrive in the Americas?
Native Americans and Alaskan Natives play an important part of America鈥檚 history and what America has become. According to , they鈥檝e occupied these lands for at least 20,000 years. Many indigenous histories and traditions state that they鈥檝e always been here. In the 15th century, Europeans arrived in the Americas and, thinking they were in India, began to call these indigenous peoples Indians.
Many peoples, cultures, religions, and traditions
Contrary to being culturally diminished by the 15th century European explorers, indigenous people had dozens of cultures, languages, religions, and traditions. There are countless unique tribes and nations, although many have been erased due to colonialist history. Today the聽. Each of which has their own spiritual practices, language, and histories.
For example:
Several tribes, including the Creek, Seminole, Yuchi and Iroquois practiced ceremonies to thank the Great Spirit for their bounty, before the corn is eaten.
The Sioux of South Dakota and the Navajo of the southwest held and ceremonies, using a sacred hoop, song and dance that could last several days.
Algonquian tribes of Massachusetts launched the 鈥�,鈥� from the Nattick word for 鈥渕edicine man,鈥� or pau wau, as a way to come together and celebrate success in hunting or battle. Today, over 700 tribes come together for the largest pow wow in North America at The Gathering of Nations in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
, a traditional recipe of the Navajo, or Dine, is the result of the 鈥淟ong Walk鈥� from Arizona to New Mexico when they were forced off their land by the U.S. government and supplied with flour and lard to survive the journey.
The , practiced by Eastern Woodland and Southeastern tribes, including the Muscogee, Euchee, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Delaware, Miami, Ottawa, Peoris, Shawnee, Seminole, and Natchez, takes place at the height of crop season and includes all tribe members as a kind of moving prayer.
And, not a lot of people know that America鈥檚 founding fathers consulted with the Iroquois nation to write the U.S. Constitution, based on the , or The Great Law of Peace.
American Indian and Alaska Native populations today
Even with the 600 indigenous cultures officially recognized in America, less than two percent of the current U.S. population is defined as Native American. Some research estimates that the pre-European population of Native Americans was as high as 112 million. By 1650 the native population had declined to less than six million, and as of the last U.S census, 6.79 million Americans identify as Native American. Alaska has the highest relative population of Native Americans, who make up 19.74% of the state鈥檚 population, or 145,816 people. Vermont has the lowest total number of Native Americans, at only 8,169.
American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month is established
The data above makes it clear that the experiences and traditions of Native communities needs to be fostered and preserved, so to not become lost, or even worse, extinct. This is why we take the month of November to honor Native Americans, their rich and diverse cultures, traditions, and histories, and to also acknowledge the important contributions they have made to the American landscape.
聽American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month wasn't always celebrated as a month in November. The first 鈥淎merican Indian Day鈥� was celebrated in May 1916 in the state of New York.
In 1990, more than seven decades later, President George H.W. Bush expanded this recognition into a month by signing a congressional resolution designating the month of November 鈥淣ational American Indian Heritage Month.鈥� Similar updates have been made every year since 1994 to recognize what we now call 鈥淎merican Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month.鈥�
This month seeks to provide a platform for Native Americans to share their cultures, traditions, and ways of life. It also gives Native people the opportunity to express to their local, state and Federal legislators their concerns and solutions for building bridges of understanding to shape the future of indigenous people in America, particularly in the areas of health and healthcare, safety, education, jobs and housing. It鈥檚 also an opportune time to educate each other about tribal cultures, and to raise awareness of the magnitude of challenges Native people have faced historically and currently, and the ways in which tribal citizens have worked to conquer these challenges.
In the words of Barack Obama鈥檚 mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, 鈥淎merica isn鈥檛 great because it鈥檚 perfect, but because it can always be made more perfect.鈥� Taking a moment to learn more about these very first Americans is one step toward making America a little bit more perfect.
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