A very brief history of Colonization
While all of USA celebrates Thanksgiving Day as a day of giving thanks for the feast shared between the first colonial Pilgrims who landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts and the Native Indians, a small group of the Natives mark it as a Day of Mourning . Why you probably never heard of this is because the narrative of history is always controlled by the winning side. I visited Plymouth last year to witness it. https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2014/11/26/national-day-of-mourning-reflects-on-thanksgivings-horrific-bloody-history Isn’t it strange that in the vast land of the United States of America, it’s very rare to actually see and encounter the original people of present-day USA? The USA, in theory, may have gotten ‘independence’ from the British crown in 1776, but this ‘independence’ remains a farce for the few remaining native inhabitants of this land. The roots of European colonization lie in the Papal bull (public decrees issued by a pope of the Roman Cath...