Revisiting George Washington’s Assault on the Haudenosaunee 240 Years Later
Time: Oct. 10, 2020, 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
Location: Virtual
Philip P. Arnold (Syracuse University),
Alyssa Mt. Pleasant (University of Buffalo)
Jake Haiwhagai'i Edwards (Onondaga Nation)
Andrea Smith (Lafayette College)
Robert Venables (Cornell, emeritus)
The Sullivan-Clinton campaign, an attack on the Haudenosaunee by General George Washington 240 years ago, was the largest assault on Native nations in US history. Drawing from Indigenous perspectives to challenge settler-colonial narratives, panelists discuss land theft, broken treaties, and attacks on Haudenosaunee sovereignty to show how this historical trauma lives on and informs contemporary xenophobia, racism, and sexism.
Where to watch:
- Streaming on Facebook: @SkaNonhCenter, @IndigenousValues
- Streaming on Twitter: @SkaNonhCenter, @IndigenousValues
- Streaming on YouTube: @IndigenousValuesInitiative
Additional supporters:
- Syracuse University Department of Religion
- Indigenous Values Initiative
- The Skä·noñh Great Law of Peace Center
Philip P. Arnold, Religion