Although Italian navigator Christopher Columbus has been credited with discovering America, he wasn’t even the first European explorer to land on U.S. shores. Despite that, there has been a national holiday in his honor since in 1937, and the story of his first voyage to the Americas with the Niña, Pinta and Santa Maria appeared in textbooks for years.

As you may now know, Columbus did not discover America. It is largely argued that American history does not start with him because natives had been inhabiting the land for centuries before his arrival. By acknowledging Columbus as the “discoverer” of our nation, the country erases the history and culture of the Native American people. Furthermore, it also honors a man who arrived in a “new world” and facilitated genocide, rape and the pillaging of land.

According to Newsweek, the explorer and many other Europeans believed “monstrous races” existed in other parts of the world. After sailing across the Atlantic Ocean—and landing in the West Indies and not East Asia, as intended—Columbus wrote, “discovered a great many islands inhabited by people without number.” While he praised the natural wonders, he also stated, “I have not found any monstrous men in these islands, as many had thought.” Nonetheless, he kidnapped and enslaved people from the Caribbean shores.

As society has become more aware of the struggles of oppressed groups, people have also begun to revise history. In 2018, close to one dozen US cities including San Francisco and Cincinnati stopped celebrating Columbus Day; instead, they observed Indigenous Peoples’ Day to honor the culture and history of Native Americans.

The holiday began in South Dakota in 1989 as a part of the reconciliation between the government and the Native American tribes of the region. Three years later, on the 500th anniversary of Columbus’ arrival, it was established in Berkeley, California.

Although a number of other cities and states are recognizing Indigenous Peoples’ Day, is not a federal holiday. On Monday, many prominent figures, including Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) and television producer Shonda Rhimes fact-checked Columbus history and pushed for Indigenous Peoples’ Day to be instituted by the government.

Eagle Heart

Dr. Craig Considine

Sen. Kamala Harris

Alyssa Milano

Martellus Bennett

https://twitter.com/MartysaurusRex/status/1049342158765838336

Qasim Rashid, Esq.

https://twitter.com/MuslimIQ/status/1049354158262951937

Shonda Rhimes

Lupe Fiasco

Neil deGrasse Tyson