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'Celebration' banned for Jamestown's 400th--You can't celebrate an invasion
Worldnetdaily ^ | 3-8-07 | Bob Unruh

Posted on 03/08/2007 5:24:52 AM PST by SJackson

'Celebration' banned for Jamestown's 400th
Events marking settlement's anniversary condemn its 'holocaust'


Posted: March 8, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Bob Unruh
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com


This year is the 400th anniversary of the arrival of settlers in Jamestown, 13 years before the Plymouth Pilgrims appeared on America's shores. And there will be discussions on the environmental impact of the settlement and its impact on African-Americans and Native Americans. But there will be no celebration.

"You can't celebrate an invasion," Mary Wade, a member of Jamestown 2007 organizing committee, has stated. After all, Indian tribes "were pushed back off of their land, even killed. Whole tribes were annihilated. A lot of people carry that oral history with them, and that's why they use the word 'invasion,' because it truly was an invasion, and I'm sure some of the Indian people will probably want to tell that as a part of the story of 400 years."

And that has some experts in history upset, since the advent of Jamestown provided what later became the United States with important introductions to Christian common law, a republican representative government, the first Protestant Christian worship service, and its first interracial marriage.

 

Wade's comments came in an interview with Voice of America, and highlighted the revisions that are going on regarding the history of Jamestown – and America. It also left a message about how important are the disputes over the political perspective now being applied retroactively to America's history.

"I believe this is one of the most significant battles of our day," said Doug Phillips, president of Vision Forum Ministries and the founder of the Jamestown Quadricentennial: A Celebration of America's Providential History, Vision Forum's own series of events to celebrate the quadracentennial. "It is the battle for our history."

He cited the fact that the Jamestown settlers arrived with not only an economic commission from England, but orders to spread the Good News of Jesus, noting one of the founders of Jamestown, Richard Hakluyt, wrote, "Wee shall by plantinge there inlarge the glory of the gospel, and from England plante sincere religion, and provide a safe and a sure place to receave people from all partes of the worlds that are forced to flee for the truthe of Gods worde."

And he said the Bible, in Psalm 78, tells readers, "If we don't tell the great deeds of God, our children will lose hope." But he said the secular perspectives that are the focal point of the contemporary events miss that Christian perspective, and that will end up being costly.

"We are destroying our children's generation by robbing them of history. They don't know who they are or where they came from," he told WND in an interview.

Phillips said America is known world-wide for its celebration, from the millions of dollars worth of fireworks ignited each 4th of July to the major festivities launched for other events, such as the 1976 Bicentennial.

But now, for the first time ever, the nation is ashamed of itself, so ashamed, he noted, Jamestown 2007 officials have banned the use of the word "celebration" in their materials.

On the other hand, they still are interested in attracting paying visitors to the region to fund their various activities, so they have turned this year's acknowledgment of the history into a bashfest.

"For America's 400th birthday, what should be a celebration of gratitude to the Lord is fast becoming an homage to revisionist historiography and political correctness," Phillips said.

For example, an event called, "State of the Black Union 2007: America's 400th Anniversary: The African American Imprint on America," already has been held. Its goal was a conversation about "how African Americans have made this nation great and how we must continue to fight to make the state of Black America a more perfect union."

Two other discussion headlines have included: "A Concentrated Diversity: The Maroons of the Great Dismal Swamp, 1619 to 1860," and "The Ecology of Jamestown – Origin of Environmental Injustice in America."

Said one commentary by Ken Adams, a tribal leader: "The British government finally sent enough people to take over all the land, which the Indians owned, and in the process of the wars that followed, 90 percent of an entire human race of people died."

"Yet, by God's grace, grateful Christians have an opportunity to officially celebrate America's great heritage on her 400th birthday," Phillips said.

His Vision Forum Ministries will be rallying Americans "from shore to shore to Jamestown" to the "Jamestown Quadricentennial: A Celebration of America's Providential History."

Those events will be June 11-16, and will highlight the significant role Jamestown played in creating the United States and its freedoms. There is a fourfold vision for Vision Forum's plans: to leave a witness for future generations that America did not forget the providential hand of God and Americans are a thankful people willing to honor the faith of their fathers, to create an exciting event that gives families an unforgettable experience, to leave a record of poetry and literature for following generations, and to leave "rocks of remembrance and Ebenezers of hope" that will provide vision for children of today.

A featured guest will be Harrison Tyler, the man whose father called for the Tercentenary 100 years ago and whose grandfather, the nation's 10th president, John Tyler, Jr., keynoted the 250th celebration.

Kevin Crossett, a spokesman for the formal Jamestown 2007 organization, said the historians decided to highlight free enterprise, representative government and cultural diversity in this year's "commemoration."

"That's not to say that other legacies are not important. These are the three that … are the most well-known," he told WND. Besides, other organizations are marking the Christian legacy, he said. "It's not being promoted as such from our office."

He said the use of the "commemoration" was changed from "celebration," as the events have been known for the last 200 years, because of objections from blacks and Native Americans.

"When we started planning the culturally diverse aspects of the Jamestown story, the African-American and Indian communities said, 'This isn't necessary a celebration for us,'" he said. "Those words struck home."

While that may have happened, Phillips notes that the actions resulting from those words actually is changing the history, since the settlers in Jamestown were commissioned to carry the message of Christianity, and did that in many ways.

"America's first published author was Captain John Smith, who described the arrival of the Jamestown settlers in 1607 as an act of providential goodness. America's spiritual 'first family,' the Mathers of New England, authored numerous works on Providence. America's first charter as an independent nation, the Declaration of Independence, announced that our ability to persevere as a nation rested in our 'firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence.' Just weeks before the Declaration was signed, America's first great political mentor, the Rev. John Witherspoon (himself a signer of the Declaration and the tutor to one sixth of the members of our Constitutional Convention) authored 'The Dominion of Providence Over the Passions of Men.' Even America's first president regularly invoked the God of providence in his writings," he said.

"Thus, gratitude to the sovereign God for His many providential blessings is not only biblical, it is richly American," Phillips said.

"In 1807 for the two hundredth, 1957 for the 250th, 1907 for the three hundredth, and then again in 1957 for the 350th anniversary celebration of America's birthday at Jamestown, our nation was enthusiastically reminded of these glorious acts of Divine Providence," Phillips noted.

For example, in 1857, former President John Tyler, Jr. gave a three-hour keynote oration tracing 250 years of providence, perseverance, and blessing.

Here amid the graves of our ancestors, we renew our pledges to those principles of self-government, which have been consecrated by their examples through two-hundred and fifty years; and implore that great Being who so often and signally preserved them through trials and difficulties, to continue to our country His protecting guardianship and care.

Phillips said the more liberal members of the media have joined the secularization and diminution of Jamestown's contributions. "A town which disappeared into the mud," is from the New York Times while the Virginia Gazette said Jamestown was "not worth it."

"For a whole year or more we shall celebrate the fact that a bunch of British buffoons who knew nothing of what they were doing colonized a swamp for the sake of Christianizing Indians," the paper said.

If such efforts are successful, "ours will be the first generation in the history of America at the time of a landmark historical celebration to officially and publicly despise our birthright and the providential hand of God in the life of our people," Phillips noted.

The event planning has been going on for years, and it was in 2000 when Congress passed the Jamestown 400th Commemoration Commission Act, setting up the organizing structure for the events now going on.

The official propaganda from that group carries it even further. Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine told an early event that those previous celebrations "did not tell the whole story," and he introduced a panel including Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and Otis Moss. Moss said this nation should be required to fix "the propaganda of history," and those Jamestown settlers were guilty of mass "holocaust" and "lynchings."

The reality is that the Jamestown settlers were people, Phillips said. "The true record includes warts, bumps, and bruises … What makes this story so compelling is that God worked through remarkable but flawed men to advance a mission that was based on a prime directive of New Testament Christianity. The result – a nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that men are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: americanhistory; crybabies; diversity; founding; godsgravesglyphs; hateamericacrowd; jamestown; jamestown400th; liberalism; politicalcorrectness; traitors; treason; virginia; waaambulance
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To: prairiebreeze
Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine told an early event that those previous celebrations "did not tell the whole story," and he introduced a panel including Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and Otis Moss. Moss said this nation should be required to fix "the propaganda of history," and those Jamestown settlers were guilty of mass "holocaust" and "lynchings."

Words have lost all meaning in America. And our children are being taught we aren't any better than, say, North Korea.

141 posted on 03/10/2007 5:24:34 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons' pardoned more terrorists than they captured or killed.)
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To: afraidfortherepublic

It is so great to see people correctly representing history in this world. Thank you all for providing the true, balanced story of the early indian colonies that the settlers met when they arrived.

I just recently started reading "A Patriots History of the United States." All I can say is thank goodness there are books being written like that one or we would never learn real history. Every page in that book is full of information that is rarely if ever discussed about our history, and then it is probably in closed doors somewhere.

But, the early indians were not these peaceful, utopian tribes that revisionists try to make them out to be. They were slaughtering their enemies and were the original slave holders on this continent.


142 posted on 03/10/2007 6:02:19 AM PST by ican'tbelieveit (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team# 36120), KW:Folding)
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To: ReignOfError
both sides killed their share of non-combatants, including old men, women and children

If by "their share" you mean to suggest anything approaching an equivalence, that is simply false.

However, that is certainly the impression that many people have taken away based on what they have absorbed from popular entertainment, historians with an ideological agenda, etc.

Frankly, that's a lot like saying that since the Americans had the Abu Ghraib incident and Saddam had his rape rooms, "both sides" did their "fair share" of torture.

The massive scale of murder, tortures and kidnappings by the Indians during the years of the frontier FAR exceeded any similar type crimes committed by the settlers.

The fact that one can point to incidents on both sides doesn't make an equivalence. And many of the incidents committed by settlers were in retaliation for the most horrific atrocities imaginable, after they had been brutalized by the savagery inflicted upon them.

143 posted on 03/10/2007 6:49:29 AM PST by SirJohnBarleycorn
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To: Renegade

Agreed. Way past time.


144 posted on 03/10/2007 6:58:35 AM PST by alarm rider (Why should I not vote my conscience?)
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To: dinoparty
Anything around your place you haven't "used" in awhile? I believe I'll come over and claim it. No sense in just letting it sit there unused and it's not really yours anymore anyway, as you don't use it.

Could be though you see things differently and may have a gun and shoot me for trespassing. (uummm, kinda like the Indians did)

145 posted on 03/10/2007 7:37:20 AM PST by fish hawk (The religion of Darwinism = Monkey Intellect)
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To: fish hawk

No, silly. The point is that we somehow stole the whole continent from the Indians, as if they could lay claim over the whole thing just because they occupy a small portion of it. That's the point that I think is illogical.


146 posted on 03/10/2007 9:02:43 AM PST by dinoparty
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To: SJackson
Michael Savage is right, this PC crap is going to kill us. Yes, I know the American Indians did get the short end of the stick and they were no dummies, in fact, it is said that we got some ideas for our laws from the Iroqious Confederation that were put in place for the Constitution and so on. Maybe things could and should have been better handled, but that is history and water over the dam. We got to get over this guilt and chips on our shoulders, it ain't healthy and is a hamper to our survival as a country. If we don't get that thought in our mind that we are all in this together, America will not survive, nor does it deserve to. Today, we have Islamo-Fascism who wants to impose Sharia Law on us and the rest of the world and we are beginning to look weak. Europe is worse, but it seems they are 10 years ahead of us.

My own belief is that when yo go back far enough in time, everyone's ancestors got the shaft from somewhere and someone else, at other times, they were at the top of the ladder. This is not to justify mistreatment of any kind, but again, it was history and hopefully we have gone far enough, which I think we did, to correct it. It isn't perfet but things are much better now.

I was on www.archive.org and I watched part of the Frank Capra World War II series, "Why We Fight," and one of the clips did celebrate Jamestown, then again, it was in the dark ages of the early 1940's when we still took pride. B-P
147 posted on 03/10/2007 9:24:56 AM PST by Nowhere Man (Pansy: 1987 - 2006, I miss you, Princess. RIP. Say "Hi" to Greystone for me)
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To: SJackson
this article is pretty funny... sounds like the occupation of 'historian' has more than its fair share of assholes.

I, FOR ONE, WILL CELEBRATE
148 posted on 03/12/2007 2:00:29 PM PDT by wafflehouse (When in danger, When in doubt, Run in circles, Scream and Shout!)
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