6/11/2023 0 Comments Abolish columbus day and rename it“Given we’ve been talking all about inclusion and making sure that we have that kind of spirit of the community and making sure we are not reflecting a history that is wrong.” “I think our inaction is going to be heard louder than a wrong action,” said board member Chuck Crush, who made the motion to vote. 16, but decided to vote Monday in order to have a plan in place in time for this year’s holiday on Oct. Schweiker suggested calling it “Intercontinental Cultural Exchange Day.”Ĭoncord School Board members considered postponing the vote again until after Murphy had discussed the matter with the Concord City Council and the school board’s community relations committee on Oct. Only one member of the public – Roy Schweiker, who is running for school board in District A – commented on the topic during Monday’s meeting. “I just don’t want you to go into a territory where you are creating controversy over a decision you’ve made without giving people the chance to discuss it.” “I would caution you – this is a very emotional, passionate topic,” Murphy told the board Sept. 8 board meeting, but at the advice of interim superintendent Kathleen Murphy, the board put off making a decision until the public had a chance to comment and the City and Community Relations Committee had a chance to discuss it. The idea of changing the name within the Concord School District was raised at the Concord School Board’s Sept. A bill to make Indigenous Peoples’ Day a statewide holiday came before the New Hampshire Legislature in 2018, 20 but failed each time. 27, the town of Dover voted to make the change. In New Hampshire, the town of Durham made the switch in September 2017, and Hopkinton followed in October 2018. states, including Vermont and Maine, and many college campuses now celebrate some version of Indigenous Peoples’ Day as an alternative to Columbus Day. I think it’s really important that they know that there are indigenous people here and we do celebrate them, and we’re not going to glorify this person,” Aquino-Patzan said. On Monday, board members discussed a few different options for renaming, including leaving the holiday nameless or with the designation “no school day,” but Richards and Aquino-Patzan repeatedly advocated for it to be called Indigenous People’s Day. Historians have said explorer Christopher Columbus and his crew enslaved people in Central and South America and the Caribbean Islands, sold many into slavery in Spain and introduced new diseases like smallpox, measles and influenza that decimated native populations in Hispaniola, now Haiti and the Dominican Republic.Īctivists say celebrating “Columbus Day” on the second Monday of October to commemorate his landing in the Americas in 1492 glorifies imperialism and should be replaced by with Indigenous Peoples’ Day, to recognize the struggles and the accomplishments of native people who were here before him. “I think this could be a teaching day for our students and members of our community as to why we shouldn’t glorify Christopher Columbus and should rather teach the real realities of the event.” It’s helpful to not push the continued American imperialism and whitewashed history going forward,” Richards said. “This year we’ve been talking about reforming our curriculum. The decision was supported by all board members present at the meeting, but received particular support from the school board’s student representatives, Alice Richards and Jenita Aquino-Patzan, in light of recent anti-racism efforts within the district. The school calendar and documentation will be updated this week to reflect the change, which passed 8-0 at the end of the monthly board meeting on Monday. The Concord School Board has voted to rename Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples’ Day within the school district.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |