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Thursday, October 3, 2013
The Big Lie: The Doctrine of Christian Discovery
Previously published in the October 2, 2013 issue of The Two Row Times
Steven Newcomb is the
author of “Pagans in the Promised Land: Decoding the Doctrine of Christian Discovery.” He is the foremost
authority on the subject. Steven will be a featured speaker of the University at
Buffalo’s Indigenous Survival Day Speaker Series on Monday, October 14, 6 to 8 p.m.
at 120 Clemens Hall. He will be a guest on “Let’s Talk Native…with John Kane”
on Sunday, October 13, 9 to 11 p.m. EDT on WWKB ESPN Sports Radio 1520AM. LTN
streams live on the Native Pride blog and on the TuneIn app for PCs and smart
phones. If you miss Steven Newcomb live on LTN or at UB, catch his appearance
in studio on demand on my blog or look for links on my “Let’s Talk Native…”
Facebook group page.
Despite where you stand on religion or Christianity
specifically, a lie is a lie even if the church utters it. One of the greatest
lies ever pulled off on people the world over is that “God” chose individual
“families” to rule over the rest of humanity. Even though many, including
Americans who should know better, are still enamored by the notion of “princes
and princesses,” most of us now relegate this stupid fairytale to Disney
cartoons and the mainstream media’s coverage of a meaningless “royal family.”
Today there is another monumental ancient big lie that simply
won’t die. Well, at least the U.S. and Canada hope it won’t. The Doctrine of
Christian Discovery is actually a bigger lie than even the monarchy ordained by
“God” that no one buys anymore. This doctrine is based almost solely on a
series of decrees by 15th century popes. Simply stated, the Vatican
ruled that when a Christian people came into the lands of pagans – or
non-believers – Christians could claim their land, their possessions and reduce
those pagans to perpetual slavery.
Of course, this sounds so preposterous that a reasonable
person would assume such a practice and policy would have died with slavery.
Certainly, it would have no place in a nation that claims to govern with a
separation of church and state. But not only is this doctrine codified in U.S.
law with court rulings and legislation built upon those rulings but it is the
basis of all U.S. land title. It is also the eggshells that the house of cards
that is “federal Indian law” is built upon. There is no event, no treaty, no
surrender, no petition and no referendum that ever places us “pagans” under the
authority of the United States or anyone else. There are only the words of dead
popes and the dead judges who regurgitated them.
The United Nations even felt compelled to state, what should
be obvious to all, in the third affirmation of the U.N. Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP):
Affirming further that all doctrines, policies and practices based on
or advocating superiority of peoples or individuals on the basis of
national origin or racial, religious, ethnic or cultural differences are
racist, scientifically false, legally invalid, morally condemnable and
socially unjust.
So, surely, with the entire international community (some
nations quite reluctantly) condemning religious based racism, issues including
equating discovery with conquest and the exclusively European-based
transferrable “discovery title” with legitimate land ownership must be
revisited. After all, can the world sit by and ignore the theft of land, subjugation
and genocide of an entire hemisphere of people based on religious dogma?
Yes, it can. And, it does.
The UNDRIP is just words on paper unless someone gives it
force. The force required isn’t just to overcome the inertia of history. It has
to overcome world powers posturing for control of water, oil, minerals, gas and
all the other natural resources on the lands of us “pagans” — the land, too,
for that matter. The force must be enough to overcome the strongest attraction
known to man. That is the attraction between a rich man and his money.
The church is in no hurry to put this issue to rest. How much
have they pillaged from the “New World” in five centuries? How much do they
still pillage? And who else has benefited? Even the Jewish judge on the U.S.
Supreme Court cited the Christian Discovery Doctrine in a rationale to dismiss
a Native land claim a few years ago. Think about it: a Jewish woman citing 15th
century Papal Bulls. And this was in 2005. How ironic and absurd is that?
It is one thing for Chief Justice John Marshal to make racist
rulings in 1823 when a black man still could be bought and sold, a woman was
still regarded as a man’s possession, and an “Indian” was just a savage with
way too much land. But even in an era of offering apologies while admitting no
guilt, there must be movement on this.
I once asked at the U.N., “Who gives the UNDRIP force?” Who
repudiates racist doctrines that continue to support unjust policies? The only
answer I got was, “We do.”
Let’s do it then. But first let’s learn how their house of
cards is built. Investigate their BS and don’t let it stand!
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2 comments:
oh man....i've been talking about this Christian bull***t lying for years (i was raised roman catholic). i currently live in the 'bible belt' in TN and almost everyone else i work with is, for the most part, a hardcore Baptist Christian with the attitude that if you're not Baptist, you're not anything - reminds me of that George Bushism, 'if you're not with us, you're against us'. Sadly, most of the time our point of view falls on deaf, arrogant ears - whites have had 500 years to change their ways and i've yet to see it fully evolve...they still take what does not belong to them, and far too often in the name of God...visit my blog at www.thewisdomtube.wordpress.com or my book site www.rescueonwhitethunder.com for an awesome Native action adventure novel...
While attending the 100 yr anniversary of 4H, my daughter and I were the"token"Indians they invited, not expecting the huge complaints we raised when we saw an exhibit of "corn" that had miraculously appeared 100 yrs. ago with the white farmer. Haha! We led a delegation of mixed race people to the Holocaust museum, where I politely asked the staffers if there was an American Indian Holocaust Museum in Germany or Israel? The Staff was horrified that i would ask such an anti-semitic question. i politely pointed out that their "museum" was located on the lands of the genocide of our people and was just curious to know if they had an "in kind" version somehwhere that acknowleged our continued genocide and suffering? Since no answer was given, we marched off to the Smithsonian to demand the return of the 225, 000 remains of our people that they continue to "study". They are exempted from NAGPRA, of course! No luck there either! Are we surprised?!?
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