In the aftermath of the
chaos surrounding Junipero Serra’s canonization, California Indians are
exhausted. Whether we thought there was
a chance of derailing Serra’s sainthood or just wanted to record our anger at
the injustice of his canonization, we worked hard and pushed ourselves through
an emotional hurricane the past year. We
are not beaten, though; just bone tired, heart-weary.
But a lot of ugly words are
being thrown around on the internet and in conversation about Indigenous people
who attended or even participated in the ceremony. Words like “traitor,”
“betrayal,” and worse are being used.
I’d like to say something about this.
I am not Catholic, and have
absolutely no loyalties to the Church or the Pope. Yet clearly, as a woman with Esselen and
Chumash Ancestors, I am angry, anguished and frustrated by Serra’s
canonization. Of the many problems I
have with the canonization, one of the biggest is this: sainthood for Serra sets up what I feel
amounts to permission for Round 2 of missionization and an outright gift to genocide-deniers. Therefore, I have invested much of my writing
and energy to speaking out against the canonization.
At the same time, I feel
that other California Indians - like Vincent Medina, who read a passage from
the Bible translated into Chochenyo as part of the canonization ceremony - have the right to take part in the
ceremony without the scathing criticism or disrespectful jokes now being slung
at him.
Why do I
feel this way? I have said many times, as
survivors of genocide, every single California Indian person alive right now is
a treasure. We do not have the luxury of denouncing or expelling people
because their methods of decolonization differ from ours. Working
together, creating bridges across those gaps, can only make us stronger and
more vital, and give us the diversity and strength we need for this battle.
Because of this belief, I can respect Vincent's position even though I would
not have chosen to make my stand in exactly same way. This wasn’t an easy
journey for me, though.
As someone who values
transparency and clarity, I appreciate that Vincent has been up-front about his
choice; he repeatedly spoke out regarding his anti-canonization position in the
media and on his personal FB page, yet he did not renounce his Catholicism,
which comes to him through a beloved and devout family network of Indigenous
people. He is also open about being gay,
which is another difficult stance for a devout Catholic. This kind of border-dwelling is not for the
faint of heart, but Vincent is not keeping any secrets.
I grew up in a family plagued
by secrets; secrets about violence, dysfunction, alcoholism, sexuality, mistakes,
death, and fear. I learned early and
continuously that to speak my truth about the world was dangerous – people
might abandon me, hurt me, take away my freedom, or even hurt themselves. There was a time in my life when I internalized
my family’s aversion to truth and dependence on lies, and I was not honest about
many things. I put up with abuse, I did
not defend those who needed it most because I feared conflict. It was easier to remain silent, to look away,
or to make up a story that hid the truth.
In short, you might say
that I grew up with a missionized mind and soul. I “feared the lash” that would come from
speaking my truth, from resisting oppression.
I cowered, and in my cowering, I allowed great damage to happen, and to
continue – to myself, to my little brother.
As I grew older and moved away, the scars of my early obedience to fear
controlled every relationship I had, from my first spouse, to my friends, and
eventually, to my own children. The
mission followed me wherever I went.
For a long time one way I
avoided the truth about my life was to simply hate the ways in which both my
father and mother contributed to my scars.
I blamed them in a simplistic black and white scenario in which they
were bad parents, and I was a victim. As
I got older and learned more about colonization, missionization, and Historical
Trauma, I was tempted to extend my hatred and righteous anger to the religious
and legal institutions that stood behind those events. I teetered on the verge of hating
Catholicism, hating all of Christianity, hating every priest I saw on the
street, hating just because it felt so good to have someone to blame for the
blows I’d taken, the blows the people I loved had suffered. This is what they mean by “internalized
oppression”: the mission of my mind made me think that hatred was my idea.
It took years, a lot of
lessons from life, and yes, a certain amount of courage, for me to learn that
something as easy as hate can’t be right, or satisfying. I still wrestle with the desire to hide from
conflict, to blame others, to lash out at someone else in ways that make me
appear to be the victim. I still feel
the weight of that mission wall around me.
Some days I think, seriously? Is there no end to these adobe bricks?!
But it took so much time to be that hateful. It took so much energy. It ate so much of my
soul. As I began to value my writing and
my creative energy, I realized that the more my hatred took over, the less
generative and productive my work became. Each burst of hatred and bitterness
was another adobe brick in the mission walls, locking me down. I was
becoming bitter, incapable of generosity, unpredictable in my moods, at a loss,
spiritually. This was never so clear as when, in the course of writing Bad Indians, I tried to describe my
father. Initially I thought, I have to write about all the bad things
he did – I have to write that truth.
Yet, my writing of those
details was terrible. Terrible to write,
and terrible to read. Flat, predictable, without heart, with nowhere to go – I found myself thinking, I might as
well just write, “My father - meh,” and leave it at that, since any extended
attempt at writing came out shallow and pointless. In short, my writing didn’t
create any goodness – for me, or in the world - when I wrote from hatred. I was
building more walls, not bridges.
It was only when I finally
admitted that I had loved my father –
truly, madly, deeply, the way a young girl idolizes her daddy – and wrote that part
out first, that I could then turn to the ugliness he had also given me. Because my father wasn’t all good, or all bad. He was a terrifying, beautiful mixture of
both, and although talking about his alcoholism or his anger was part of the
truth about him, it wasn’t ALL of the truth about him. He also had an incredible touch with plants,
understood color like an artist, could be tender and heart-broken as a child
over a sick pet. In fact …
My father was
complicated. And so was my love for
him. That was the truth I’d been trying
to avoid. That was the bridge I’d been trying to burn.
So when I see people slamming Vincent
Medina or other California Indians for their choice to remain Catholic, or even
to participate in the ceremony, I want to say, look: it’s complicated. There is no one way to be California Indian.
Many people think that my choices
to live far away from our homeland, be active in academia, live as a Two-Spirit
person, are very un-California Indian.
And I admit that there are times when even I desperately wish I were
living at home, learning things I can only learn from elders and people who
have been working all their lives with the materials, languages, land and
peoples of our homeland. But one thing
I’ve learned in 54 years: each human being has individual talents and skills,
and the trick is to figure out what yours are, and what choices you must make
to put them to best use. I’ve made choices that not everyone approves of, or is
comfortable with. The choice to come
out. The choice to identify as
Indigenous and commit to the work of decolonization (hey, as a mixed-blood, I
could pass as vaguely ethnic and run with the unaffiliated pack). The choice to support a woman’s right to
abortion. The choice to say, I’m not a
Christian. Some people have written me
off for those choices, even in my own family.
Here’s what I know about
living in a black and white world: Lumping
people together into one group – those people are good, these people are bad -
is almost always an act of fear.
So while I would have
chosen differently for myself, I respect Vincent’s choice and I acknowledge his reasons for making that choice.
Vincent posted a statement
on FB saying that by participating in the canonization ceremony, he
specifically wanted to let the world know that not only did California Indians
survive such a massive genocide, but that some of us are actively working to
reclaim language, culture, and identity, to thrive as creative and modern
people, and to speak languages that the Church worked violently to wipe out –
and to speak these words in the presence of the Pope and the world.
I have fears about what the
post-canonization world is going to look like for California Indians, but I
recognize that Vincent’s actions have solid reasoning behind them, a strategy
that has value in any struggle against oppression. During the Civil Rights Movement, their African
heritage did not prevent a large majority of Blacks from being both Christian
and opposed to racism, even though most American slave-owners were Christian
and imposed Christianity on their enslaved workers. Instead, Civil Rights activists called out
Christians who did not live honestly by their own belief system and challenged
them to live up to their own sacred truths.
For these activists, evolving as a people who rejected institutionalized
racism did not mean a refutation of a once-foreign religion that had become
theirs.
Thus, I can see the value
of Vincent’s hopes that his Indigenous presence might act as a catalyst and
reminder of Indigenous surviance. Perhaps
because I am a woman who lived in silence about my romantic and sexual
attraction to other women for decades, I know the power of finally speaking
out, and the yearning for an audience to hear my voice. In addition, I admire
Vincent not just for his cultural work, his commitment to learning his
language, and for his work as a Two-Spirit person, but for his courage to do
all this in the face of much opposition. To voice his truth as a
contemporary California Indian man is not the easiest path he could have
taken.
I want that kind of courage
– along with the courage I saw in so many California Indians during this fight
– as part of our community. Together, we have so. much. power.
We Californian Indians live
now in a post-canonization world.
Canonization of Serra happened, and we must work to survive its
aftermath: the disrespect done to us by the Church, by media coverage, by
educational institutions and yes, by each other. Wounds have been re-opened, and many of our
learned coping responses to stress and anger have popped right up (oh hello old
triggers! I see you!). We must ask ourselves, is this the best
bridge I can help build toward what happens next? Have I cut myself off from the possibility of
diverse, rich California Indian voices in conversation? Will I be part of a community that stretches
and grows with change, or divides and diminishes?
As I write this, I’m
speaking to myself. I’ll be fifty-four
years old next month. Some days, it
feels as if there is so little time left in this life for me to learn
everything I want to learn, and to accomplish all that I want to leave behind. Some days, it feels as if I have just crawled
out of the mission. Sometimes, I think,
if I have to move one more fucking adobe brick, I am going to lose my mind.
I want to have
conversations with my relatives, not battles.
Let’s save our ferocity for decolonizing, and give our compassion and
patience to one another. I want to be
part of a strong, deep California Indian future. I’m not saying we can’t disagree or engage in
critical thinking, even argue back and forth - but haven’t we built all the mission walls we ever want to
build?
Nimasianexelpasaleki. Thank you for listening.
Simply, Spiritually Beautiful.
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