http://www.parliamentofreligions.org/
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/en/declaration.html
Indigenous delegates ask Pope to repudiate Doctrine of Discovery
By Gale Courey Toensing
Story Published: Dec 22, 2009
Story Updated: Dec 18, 2009
MELBOURNE, Australia – While indigenous delegates from around the world were
sidelined at the 15th United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in
Copenhagen, the collective voice of indigenous peoples at the 2009 Parliament of
the World’s Religions was heard calling on the Pope to repudiate the Christian
Doctrine of Discovery.
The Doctrine, a fundamentally racist philosophy from the 15th century, continues
to allow powerful nation-states to dehumanize people and devastate the living
earth in their endless search for resources and markets, the delegation said.
Indigenous peoples from around the world, including a Haudenosaunee delegation,
attended the Parliament of the World’s Religions in Australia Dec. 3 – 9.
The Parliament is an interfaith organization formed in 1893 “to cultivate
harmony among the world’s religious and spiritual communities and foster their
engagement with the world and its guiding institutions in order to achieve a
just, peaceful and sustainable world.” It meets every five years.
While the delegates came from diverse geographies and cultures, they easily
unified around the intersecting themes of the Christian Doctrine of Discovery,
the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and climate
change. The delegates articulated their concerns in a document called “An
Indigenous Peoples’ Statement to the World Delivered at The Parliament of the
World’s Religions Convened at Melbourne, Australia on the Traditional Lands of
the Wurundjeri People of the Kulin Nation December 9, 2009.”
The seven point statement calls for immediate action on climate change; the
protection of earth-based religions and sacred sites both within and outside
their territories; strengthening and protecting indigenous cultures and
languages, repatriation of the ancestors’ remains and sacred items, and the
support and implementation of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples.
The final item is “To call upon Pope Benedict XVI and the Vatican to publicly
acknowledge and repudiate the papal decrees that legitimized the original
activities that have evolved into the dehumanizing Doctrine of Christian
Discovery and dominion in laws and policies.”
“Overall the trip was very successful in bringing forward the idea of rescinding
the papal bulls,” said Jake Swamp, Wolf Clan sub-chief of the Kahniakehaka,
Mohawk Nation, author, and founder of the Tree of Peace Society, an
international organization promoting peace and environmental conservation.
“I think that’s the most important thing in our time is to finally attack the
roots of the oppression experienced by indigenous peoples worldwide.”
The papal bulls were 15th century documents issued by the popes of the Roman
Catholic Church giving permission to the kings of Spain and Portugal to conquer
and claim “undiscovered” lands, enslave or skill their non-Christian
populations, and expropriate their possessions and resources. The English
monarchy followed suit with “charters” to explorers such as John Cabot to
colonize “the New World.”
The Doctrine of Discovery, which these documents formulated, was a principle of
international law – a kind of early trade agreement that whichever Christian
European country “discovered” lands populated by non-Christians could claim
those lands and resources.
The Doctrine concerns indigenous people all over the world, because it continues
to negatively affect people everywhere, said Philip Arnold, associate professor
of indigenous religions in the Department of Religion at Syracuse University,
and a member of the Haudenosaunee delegation.
Arnold, who is married to a Mohawk woman, participated on a panel with some
members of the Haudenosaunee delegation where he discussed how the Doctrine even
affects his own family.
The Doctrine justified the establishment of the notorious boarding schools in
the 19th and 20th centuries that aimed to “civilize” Indian children by removing
them from their families and stripping them of their language, traditions, and
culture, Arnold said.
“My wife’s family suffered through boarding schools, so I was able to talk about
the Doctrine and how it negatively impacts us. In those boarding schools,
everything was stripped out of these kids, so even though it was more than 100
years ago that my wife’s grandfather was in a boarding school, we still deal
with that legacy every day with our children, trying to help them understand
what was done and why they don’t participate in Long House ceremonies, for
example, because their clans were taken from them by this ‘civilizing’ process.”
He said the panel presentations by the Haudenosaunee delegation were effective
in stimulating interest.
“There were a lot of Christians from a variety of denominations and they got
very active and wanted to know what they could do to help bring awareness about
the Doctrine of Discovery and we encouraged them to do that within their own
denominations. There was a Catholic priest who was very animated about this.”
A movement to repudiate the Doctrine is gaining steam among Christian churches
since the Episcopal Church issued a resolution renouncing it and urging support
of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous peoples at its national meeting
last summer. Last September, the Indian Committee of the Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends made a similar commitment.
Arnold said members of the Haudenosaunee delegation will continue to work to
raise awareness of the Doctrine in the hope of gaining a critical mass of
grassroots support the Vatican will not be able to ignore.
“The Doctrine maps a cultural attitude – our arrogance – toward the indigenous
peoples and the earth. The whole colonial project, which is the legacy of
America, is based on these principles, which are directly antagonistic to Native
peoples, but also antagonistic to the life systems of the earth. So this idea of
Discovery just can’t hold up.”