| Remarks of Kevin
Gover, Assistant Secretary-Indian Affairs Department of the Interior
at the Ceremony Acknowledging the 175th Anniversary of the Establishment
of the Bureau of Indian Affairs September 8, 2000
In March of 1824, President James Monroe established the Office
of Indian Affairs in the Department of War. Its mission was to conduct
the nation's business with regard to Indian affairs. We have come
together today to mark the first 175 years of the institution now
known as the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
It is appropriate that we do so in the first year of a new century
and a new millennium, a time when our leaders are reflecting on
what lies ahead and preparing for those challenges. Before looking
ahead, though, this institution must first look back and reflect
on what it has wrought and, by doing so, come to know that this
is no occasion for celebration; rather it is time for reflection
and contemplation, a time for sorrowful truths to be spoken, a time
for contrition.
We must first reconcile ourselves to the fact that the works of
this agency have at various times profoundly harmed the communities
it was meant to serve. From the very beginning, the Office of Indian
Affairs was an instrument by which the United States enforced its
ambition against the Indian nations and Indian people who stood
in its path. And so, the first mission of this institution was to
execute the removal of the southeastern tribal nations. By threat,
deceit, and force, these great tribal nations were made to march
1,000 miles to the west, leaving thousands of their old, their young
and their infirm in hasty graves along the Trail of Tears.
As the nation looked to the West for more land, this agency participated
in the ethnic cleansing that befell the western tribes. War necessarily
begets tragedy; the war for the West was no exception. Yet in these
more enlightened times, it must be acknowledged that the deliberate
spread of disease, the decimation of the mighty bison herds, the
use of the poison alcohol to destroy mind and body, and the cowardly
killing of women and children made for tragedy on a scale so ghastly
that it cannot be dismissed as merely the inevitable consequence
of the clash of competing ways of life.
This agency and the good people in it failed in the mission to
prevent the devastation. And so, great nations of patriot warriors
fell. We will never push aside the memory of unnecessary and violent
death at places such as Sand Creek, the banks of the Washita River,
and Wounded Knee. Nor did the consequences of war have to include
the futile and destructive efforts to annihilate Indian cultures.
After the devastation of tribal economies and the deliberate creation
of tribal dependence on the services provided by this agency, this
agency set out to destroy all things Indian.
This agency forbade the speaking of Indian languages, prohibited
the conduct of traditional religious activities, outlawed traditional
government, and made Indian people ashamed of who they were. Worst
of all, the Bureau of Indian Affairs committed these acts against
the children entrusted to its boarding schools, brutalizing them
emotionally, psychologically, physically, and spiritually. Even
in this era of self -determination, when the Bureau of Indian Affairs
is at long last serving as an advocate for Indian people in an atmosphere
of mutual respect, the legacy of these misdeeds haunts us. The trauma
of shame, fear and anger has passed from one generation to the next,
and manifests itself in the rampant alcoholism, drug abuse, and
domestic violence that plague Indian country. Many of our people
live lives of unrelenting tragedy as Indian families suffer the
ruin of lives by alcoholism, suicides made of shame and despair,
and violent death at the hands of one another. So many of the maladies
suffered today in Indian country result from the failures of this
agency. Poverty, ignorance, and disease have been the product of
this agency's work.
And so today I stand before you as the leader of an institution
that in the past has committed acts so terrible that they infect,
diminish, and destroy the lives of Indian people decades later,
generations later. These things occurred despite the efforts of
many good people with good hearts who sought to prevent them. These
wrongs must be acknowledged if the healing is to begin.
I do not speak today for the United States. That is the province
of the nation's elected leaders, and I would not presume to speak
on their behalf. I am empowered, however, to speak on behalf of
this agency, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and I am quite certain
that the words that follow reflect the hearts of its 10,000 employees.
Let us begin by expressing our profound sorrow for what this agency
has done in the past. Just like you, when we think of these misdeeds
and their tragic consequences, our hearts break and our grief is
as pure and complete as yours. We desperately wish that we could
change this history, but of course we cannot. On behalf of the Bureau
of Indian Affairs, I extend this formal apology to Indian people
for the historical conduct of this agency.
And while the BIA employees of today did not commit these wrongs,
we acknowledge that the institution we serve did. We accept this
inheritance, this legacy of racism and inhumanity. And by accepting
this legacy, we accept also the moral responsibility of putting
things right. We therefore begin this important work anew, and make
a new commitment to the people and communities that we serve, a
commitment born of the dedication we share with you to the cause
of renewed hope and prosperity for Indian country. Never again will
this agency stand silent when hate and violence are committed against
Indians. Never again will we allow policy to proceed from the assumption
that Indians possess less human genius than the other races. Never
again will we be complicit in the theft of Indian property. Never
again will we appoint false leaders who serve purposes other than
those of the tribes. Never again will we allow unflattering and
stereotypical images of Indian people to deface the halls of government
or lead the American people to shallow and ignorant beliefs about
Indians. Never again will we attack your religions, your languages,
your rituals, or any of your tribal ways. Never again will we seize
your children, nor teach them to be ashamed of who they are. Never
again.
We cannot yet ask your forgiveness, not while the burdens of this
agency's history weigh so heavily on tribal communities. What we
do ask is that, together, we allow the healing to begin: As you
return to your homes, and as you talk with your people, please tell
them that time of dying is at its end. Tell your children that the
time of shame and fear is over. Tell your young men and women to
replace their anger with hope and love for their people. Together,
we must wipe the tears of seven generations. Together, we must allow
our broken hearts to mend. Together, we will face a challenging
world with confidence and trust. Together, let us resolve that when
our future leaders gather to discuss the history of this institution,
it will be time to celebrate the rebirth of joy, freedom, and progress
for the Indian Nations. The Bureau of Indian Affairs was born in
1824 in a time of war on Indian people. May it live in the year
2000 and beyond as an instrument of their prosperity.
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