The Legacy of Their Names
The soil of Turtle Island
is forever drenched
with the innocent blood
of its first inhabitants -
men, women and children
who had their humanity denied.
In right relationship
with the Creator
and creation,
the First Nations
were considered obstacles
to your insatiable greed.
The God you trusted
to bring you safely
across the Atlantic
was too small
for this new life.
Putting aside
loving
your neighbor
as yourself,
you chose to worship
at the tarnished altar
of the golden calf.
A bounty of unfamiliar
natural resources
were no more than
tools
for personal wealth
as you coveted ownership
instead of stewardship.
Walking this land
from time immemorial,
you found their presence
to warrant a litany
of broken promises,
infected blankets,
and genocide.
In spite of you,
some survived only
to be denied access
to their ancestral lands
before being forced
to walk the Trail of Tears -
their own via dolorosa.
We hear echoes
of their presence here
in their descendants
and in the legacy
of their names.
Alabama, Algonquin, Apache,
Apalachee,
Apalachicola, Arapaho,
Autauga, Aztec,
Chattahoochee,
Cherokee,
Cheyenne, Chickasaw,
Choctaw,
Choctawhatchee, Clayhatchee,
Conecuh,
Creek,
Cuyahoga,
Dakota,
Etowah,
Eufaula,
Hatchechubbee,
Hiawasee, Illinois, Inuit,
Kolomoki,
Loachapoka,
Massachusetts,
Maya
, Michigan, Milwaukee, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Mohawk, Natchez,
Navajo,
Notasulga,
Okaloosa, Oneida,
Opelika, Opelousas, Osage,
Osceola,
Pensacola, Piute,
Seminole, Shoshone, Sioux,
Sylacauga,
Talladega,
Tallahassee,
T
allapoosa,
Tallassee,
Topeka,
Tuscaloosa,
Tuskegee,
Wedowee,
Wetumpka, Wewahitchka,
Wichita, Zuni.