Monday, October 8, 2012

COLUMBUS DAY in the United States


Columbus Day, which is annually on the second Monday of October, remembers Christopher Columbus' arrival to the Americas on October 12, 1492. This holiday is controversial because the European settlement in the Americas led to the demise of the history and culture of the indigenous peoples.

Background
Christopher Columbus is often portrayed as the first European to sail to the Americas. He is sometimes portrayed as the discoverer of the New World. However, this is controversial on many counts. There is evidence that the first Europeans to sail across the Atlantic were Viking explorers from Scandinavia. In addition, the land was already populated by indigenous peoples, who had 'discovered' the Americas thousands of years before.

Columbus Day originated as a celebration of Italian-American heritage and was first held in San Francisco in 1869. The first state-wide celebration was held in Colorado in 1907. In 1937, Columbus Day become a holiday across the United States. Since 1971, it has been celebrated on the second Monday in October. The date on which Columbus arrived in the Americas is also celebrated as the Día de la Raza (Day of the Race) in Latin America and some Latino communities in the USA. However, it is a controversial holiday in some countries and has been re-named in others.

Columbus Day celebrations are controversial because the settlement of Europeans in the Americas led to the deaths of a very large proportion of the native people. It has been argued that this was a direct result of Columbus' actions. It is clear that the arrival of the European settlers led to the demise of a large proportion of the history and culture of the indigenous peoples of the Americas. It has also been argued that Columbus should not be honored for discovering the United States, as he only went as far as some islands in the Caribbean and never got as far as mainland America.

2 comments:

  1. Our Earth has had migratory people on it for thousands of years. Most lands had many different groups of native dwellers over thousands of years. There are good points on both sides of the arguments, I suppose how one thinks about this is, in part, based on their own heritage and knowledge. Thanks for the article, it is thought provoking. - Michelle

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  2. I hate to be nit picky, but, for clarification, Columbus didn't discover the United States. He discovered the Americas. Even that is not entirely accurate, but what he did do lead the way to the Westernization of the Americas. I think that it can be argued that without Columbus, there may not be a United States. Which begs the question: What if?

    Regards.

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