ABC 7; LA Currents; USA Today; Xochitl, Ashley Wells, Pfc. Sandoval (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Columbus Day Parade returns to Chicago's Loop
Recognizing Native Americans on Indigenous Peoples' Day across the USA
The second Monday of October has been a national holiday for close to a century, but this will be only the second year that Indigenous Peoples' Day has held that designation.
Last October, President Joe found a way to keep the status quo while appearing to be progressive when he signed the first presidential proclamation of Indigenous Peoples' Day, a commemoration-turned-holiday that began in 1977 to honor Native American history and culture. Nothing will change.
That presidential symbolic "stamp of approval" was the most significant boost to date of efforts refocusing a federal holiday that for decades celebrated genocidal rapist Christopher Columbus' "discovery" of the Caribbean.
Although few Americans are arguing with the notion of being off work on Monday, Columbus Day and Indigenous Peoples' Day have prompted political debate in states, cities, and municipalities around the U.S.A., especially in the past decade, with some pushing against change and others favoring Indigenous Peoples' Day instead.
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