Columbus Day Should Become Explorers Day
“Ocian in view! O! the
joy.”
These
are the words written in William Clark’s journal at midday on November 7,
1805. They project the desperate relief
he felt upon seeing the Pacific Ocean. Here, at last, was the goal the Corps of
Discovery had been seeking for the better part of two years. The explorers had reached the furthest point
of their journey; and faced the long and equally perilous trek home. The travels of Lewis and Clark carry real
life drama that exceeds any attempts at mythology.
The act of exploration: its danger, daring and shared
hardship form a unique bond among those who bear the title “explorer.” Their feats become legends and their lives
cast long shadows. The story of mankind
follows where the explorers lead. They
are humanity’s pathfinders.
Columbus
was an explorer. The second Monday of each October is Columbus
Day. So why does Columbus
and the celebration of this day cause a yearly blooming of sour grapes that
makes Napa Valley look like a backyard garden?
First, Columbus wasn’t the
first European to land in North America. Leif Eriksson and a band of Norsemen created
a settlement of almost two years duration in Newfoundland
1500 years before Columbus. Then, of course, there are the innumerable
groups of Native Americans who were already here—immigrants from Asia that spread over an entire hemisphere over thousands
of years.
There is also the popular complaint that Europeans
brought diseases to the Native Americans which decimated their ranks. We did.
Smallpox was our gift to them, but, to be fair, they returned the favor
by giving us syphilis—a Western Hemisphere
disease. In a swap of smallpox for
syphilis, I would say the Native Americans gave as good as they got.
Many Native Americans take exception to our focus on Columbus because his
arrival, and the invasion of Europeans that followed, led to a breakdown of their
numbers and societal structures. Also
true; let’s face it, we won. But before
we get too “Rousseau” on the lives those indigenous people were living, keep in
mind that their idyllic lifestyle included slavery, torture, infanticide and
systematic genocide on rival tribes and clans. The important thing to remember is that, on neither side were people treated beyond the bounds of what were
then the cultural norms for their respective groups. You can not retroactively condemn people for
not conforming to a standard of morality which did not exist at the time.
Columbus
gets a bad rap from whining snowflakes who want to rewrite history to fit modern
prejudices. We live in a society where
it is fashionable to hate anything that looks successful, white and male. But I also think that Columbus Day is a
holiday that needs to be revisited and revised.
It is too small, too limited, and does not go to the heart of what we
are really trying to celebrate.
Columbus
was an explorer. He took intelligent and
calculated risks. He thought through
problems, dared much and won big. So did
Esteban, a West African slave who explored much of the south and southwest of
this country. So did Zheng He of China who explored Asia, Africa and the Middle East. So
did James Cook and Roald Amundsen. So
did Sacajawea, a woman and Native American without whose help Lewis and Clark
would probably never have reached the Pacific.
Columbus Day is the wrong holiday, celebrated in the
wrong way. We should replace it with an Explorers
Day devoted to the lives of those people who have helped shaped the modern
world. And instead of shutting down our
schools and national offices, let’s keep them open for work, study and
thoughtful debate. Let’s expand the list
of people of note, and talk about what makes them earn a memory that lasts long
after their time is gone.
Study an explorer to keep the faith.
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