Hi Friends.
Keeping this edition abbreviated and to the point:
Monday, October 11, is Indigenous Peoples Day.
I'm writing this from New York City - the epicenter of its competing holiday, Columbus Day. It's here where organizers behind the city's Columbus Day Parade are touting it as the nation's largest.
As of this writing on Sunday morning, it's unclear whether Mayor Bill DeBlasio will be marching in the parade. Last year, when the event was held virtually, he wasn't even invited.
In the past, the Mayor's Office has offended the Columbus Citizens Foundation when DeBlasio's wife, Chirlane McCray, cut Mother Francis Cabrini, America's first canonized saint, from a list of honored women under consideration for a statue in the city.
DeBlasio drew further ire from Italian-American New Yorkers when the city's public school system scrapped the holiday in favor of Indigenous Peoples Day last year.
New York City and the State of New York remain strongholds for those defending Columbus Day from eradication. The storied holiday was politicized in the 19th century in honor of Christopher Columbus, a man who never even set foot on North American soil, and whose diaries from his exploring in the Caribbean celebrated the evil imposed on Indigenous people.
I went state-by-state examining statutes and official state holidays and found that as many as 17 states actually declare Columbus Day as an "Official State Holiday." And despite all the hype that you might be seeing in your headlines about how Indigenous Peoples Day is gaining momentum, only four states have officially ditched Columbus Day for Indigenous Peoples Day. Three others, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Alabama, want to have it both ways: Columbus and Indigenous Peoples Day.
That's not how it works.