Biden will issue an official apology on Friday afternoon.
By Kiara Alfonseca, October 25, 2024,
For more than a century, from the early 1800s to the 1960s, Indigenous children were taken from their tribes -- sometimes forcibly from their homes -- to attend government assimilation boarding schools. On Friday afternoon, President Joe Biden will issue a formal apology from the U.S. government to impacted communities.
Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American to hold a Cabinet position, says her grandparents and mother were among those shipped off to these schools: "I understand that history," she told host Brad Mielke on Friday's episode of "Start Here," ABC News’ flagship daily news podcast.
"The children got to these boarding schools. They were stripped of their clothing. Their hair was cut. They were forbidden to speak their native languages and were beat if they did," said Haaland.
Haaland went on a reservation listening tour to hear from tribal elders and descendants of people who attended these schools as part of a federal investigation into the government's boarding school programs and the reported physical and emotional abuse as well as death that took place.
She also investigated those who never made it home, and found that hundreds of children had been buried at unmarked sites far away from their homes.
As part of her investigation, Haaland put together a list of recommendations, the first of which is to issue a formal acknowledgment and apology from the U.S. government.
Debating class, Carlisle Indian School, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, 1901. A young woman standing...
Frances Benjamin Johnston/Heritage Images via Getty Images
President Biden told White House reporters Thursday that he’s going to Arizona “to do something that should have been done a long time ago."
“To make a formal apology to the Indian nations for the way we treated their children for so many years,” he said. “That’s why I’m going. That’s why I’m heading west.”
Haaland told "Start Here" that an apology is the first step in working toward a remedy to the trauma and pain.
"Quite frankly, Native American history is American history, so it's important for the survivors and the descendants, I believe, to feel that they are seen."
ABC News' Justin Gomez contributed to this report.
And watch the conservatives find fault with this. One would think, in this day of immigrant bashing we would recognize the simple fact we were the original immigrants to this land and brought all sorts of infectious diseases. Unfortunately, this was not the only land to be hit by the scourge of European immigration.
Most of my ancestors were at one time immigrants. However, I also have some native ancestry as well, according to my father.
I do have an ability to tan really well, which I attribute to my native ancestry. On my trip to California a couple of weeks ago, I found I was darker than any of my Asian friends. I also am usually darker than my middle brother's kids who are a little more than half native. My last boyfriend was originally attracted to me because, in part, he thought I was of mixed race (hispanic/white).
I've considered doing the 23 and Me test to just to find out how much native ancestry there is. From my father's account it would only be about 3.125%. I do know that when I was in my early 20's working graveyard, my skin got as white as Matthew Broderick. So, my ancestry does seem to be primarily from Europe. My parents, who were Mormon, did a lot of genealogy, and traced some ancestors back to the 5th century in Scotland and Austria. My father claimed we traced back to royal families of the time, but I suspect most people would trace back to royalty in times when most countries were little more than city states.
Still, I do wonder. I just don't want to have to pay for a "subscription" from one of the DNA ancestry companies, and I know Ancestry.com has contributed a great deal to far right wing causes, so I would NEVER use their services.
This should have been done decades ago. But it is a good curtain call for Joe.