Essay On Indian Boarding School

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I watched Indian School: Stories of Survival (Films Media Group). In this documentary, Native Americans ( from many different tribes) speak about their experience with ethnocide. Ethnocide, according to the textbook is “the destruction of a group’s culture, without necessarily killing any of the members of the culture” (Eller 235). In this particular case, they speak on Indian boarding schools, which were created to essentially erase Native American culture and idealogies. Children at 7-8 years old, would be taken from their homes and sent to various places. This was so the children were spread out to ensure that a bunch of children from the same tribe would not end up in the same place. These children would experience emotional, physical and spiritual abuse, in order to ensure that all remnants of their culture were extinguished and would return home at 17-18 years old, an entirely different person. Thus, boarding schools were created to assimilate children to live and participate in a white society. This was brought on by white settlers in the 19th century, as they wanted the Native Americans to minimize their ideologies and instead practice American culture. Americans regarded the Native Americans with either fear or saw them as inferior, and reformers believed that …show more content…

“Intergenerational trauma is trauma that is not resolved in the generation where it's found. And as a result, that trauma is passed on from one generation to the next and contributes to the problems that we see in many societies today” (Indian Schools: Stories of Survival). As a result, remnants of this ethnocide have been passed down for many generations despite the fact that the parent themselves did not experience boarding school

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