The New Trail of Tears: How Washington Is Destroying American Indians
by
Naomi Schaefer Riley
Order:
USA
Can
Encounter, 2016 (2016)
Hardcover, e-Book
Reviewed by Hilary Williamson
N
aomi Schaefer Riley's
The New Trail of Tears: How Washington Is Destroying American Indians
delves into the status of indigenous communities in both the U.S. and Canada, and the (past and present) damage done by a paternalistic bureaucracy in both countries that has left '
communities existing in a kind of suspended animation.
'
S
he tells us that American Indians' poverty rate is almost twice the national average, and that '
This deprivation seems to contribute not only to higher rates of crime but also to higher rates of suicide, alcoholism, gang membership, and sexual abuse.
' She backs it up with shocking statistics, informing us that each problem is statistically worse with results '
restricted to Native Americans who live on reservations.
'
R
iley asks '
what does America owe Indians?
' and traveled to communities around the United States and Canada in search of answers. Her conclusion is that
'the problems American Indians face today - lack of economic opportunity, lack of education, and lack of equal protection under the law - and the solutions to these problems require a different approach from the misguided paternalism of the past 150 years.'
L
ack of individual land ownership and federal government control of land held in trust have left Native Americans with
dead capital
- land is owned on paper but can't be sold or borrowed against to start a small business, or participate in the economy. Riley speaks of the popular myth that indigenous culture was a socialist utopia, contradicting both history and basic human nature. And she comments on the challenge of training people to move away from a state of dependency that has become their norm.
R
iley also addresses areas where improvements can be, and have been achieved, emphasizing education as a key one, as well as '
more fiscal and political autonomy
'. Though it's clearly a long and bumpy road to achieving real change, the book makes clear that it's one that must be taken, given that such wealthy nations '
have what amounts to a third world country within our borders.
' Strongly recommended.
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