1. The discovery of ~1,000 graves at schools for indigenous children in Canada has cast a spotlight on a dark past. But long before those discoveries, Native American activists have been asking the US to provide an accounting of how many children died on this side of the border:
2. Along with Navajo photographer @Schischillyy, I set out to Colorado to one campus, Fort Lewis College, which was built on the bones of a former boarding school known as the Fort Lewis Indian School and which has been wrestling with its complicated past since 2019:
3. For decades, the university has provided a tuition waiver to Native American students as a kind of reparation. But it wasn't until two years ago, when a Native American professor @theoreticalfun rode her bike past these panels that the college began its own, full-on reckoning:
4. @theoreticafun, an assistant professor of biochemistry who is herself Navajo, noticed that the panels inside the campus' clocktower showed pictures of native children forced to wear Western clothes. None of them were smiling. Yet the historical panels described them as "happy"
5. Her email to newly-appointed college president @TomStritikus led to a campus-wide truth-and-reconciliation effort, as professors and students began digging through the archive to understand what happened at the former boarding school which closed in 1910.
6. I spent days poring over the archive and its clear that children died in this boarding school, as they did in the dozens of others that the federal government ran since the 1800s for the purpose of assimilating Native Americans:
7. Federal agents trawled reservations like those of the Southern Utes pressuring families to enroll their children. But families didn't want to part with their children. In this report, even the agent seems sympathetic pointing out how many Ute children had died at such schools:
8. Federal agents were authorized to withhold food rations, essentially starving families who refused to send their kids. See this message from the Ft Lewis superintendent, demanding parents seek a voucher from a white person to be able to take their child home for the summer:
9. Beyond the fact that children died, campuses like Fort Lewis are wrestling with the impact these schools had on those who survived. We spoke to five survivors and 19 children of survivors of the federal boarding schools to learn about the generational trauma they inflicted:
10. Children who attended these federal boarding schools were beaten if they spoke their own language, and several reprimanded if they were caught practicing any element of their spirituality - from drumming, to singing. They inculcated shame about their Native American origin.
11. The statistics of just one tribe are damning: In the 1800s, federal agents complained that almost no adults on the Southern Ute reservation in southwestern Colorado spoke English. Today, only around 30 people, less than 2% of a tribe of around 1,500, still speak the Ute.
12. The survivors we spoke to described how it took them decades before they dared speak their language again. Among them is Bessie Smith, a Navajo elder, who spoke of how she learned to perform a Navajo ritual inside her heart, the only place that the school couldn't police:
13. To read more and to see @Schischillyy's incredible photos, please see our story: nytimes.com/2021/07/19/us/…

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More from @rcallimachi

3 Jun
1. More than 400 universities in America have instituted vaccine mandates. But the rules were devised with domestic students in mind who have access to the three vaccines available in the US. What about international students who can't get those vaccines?nytimes.com/2021/06/03/us/…
2. In the US, students are considered vaccinated if they received the Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Most universities are telling international students they will accept those three plus any others vetted by the WHO. That leaves out students like Milloni Doshi:
3. Milloni is from Mumbai and is due to start her masters at Columbia this fall. She's been vaccinated with Covaxin, which is not WHO approved. Columbia and many other colleges in the US are telling students like her that they will need to be revaccinated once they come on campus
Read 11 tweets
22 May
1. More than 400 universities have announced students will not be able to enroll next fall if they haven't been vaccinated for Covid-19. A look at a map of where they are located shows that 92% of these colleges are in states that voted for Biden:
nytimes.com/2021/05/22/us/…
2. A tracker compiled by @chronicle, which is updated every day, shows that just 34 colleges out of 404 are in states that voted for Donald Trump in the last election: chronicle.com/blogs/live-cor…
3. The electoral map serves as a near exact proxy of which colleges have imposed the vaccine requirement, speaking to our divided politics and to how politicized the pandemic has become. To understand what was happening I interviewed 2 dozen university leaders, like Katie Conboy
Read 11 tweets
5 May
1/ Three million. That's the estimate of how many children have dropped out of school as a result of the pandemic. To see in slow motion what it's like when a child falls behind, @tamirbenkalifa & I spent a week with 11-year-old Jordyn as he tried to learn nytimes.com/2021/05/05/us/…
2/ Jordyn's single mom, Precious, earns $12-an-hour as a security guard at a casino in Tunica, Miss. She is just below the cutoff for government assistance, and on her salary all she can afford is a $400-a-month apartment. It has no stove, no fridge - and crucially, no internet
3/ What does that mean for Jordyn in the age of remote learning? It means that he needs to wait for his mom to get home from work in order to use her cellphone to log into his virtual class. We sat next to him on this couch as he struggled to do math class on this phone:
Read 11 tweets
30 Apr
In Year 2 of the pandemic, more colleges than not are doing some version of an in-person commencement, albeit with restrictions. That has sown frustration at the minority of schools sticking to a virtual-only ceremony: nytimes.com/2021/04/30/us/…
At the University of Tampa, a group of seniors took matters into their own hands. @allilark11_ turned to Instagram to ask classmates: If we were to put on our own in-person event, would you attend? Overwhelmed by the support, they rented a convention center for a DIY graduation:
3. And at the University of Michigan - home to the largest stadium in the country - parents stood on the streets of Ann Arbor hoisting placards demanding an in-person graduation for their children:
Read 5 tweets
29 Sep 20
1. Last night, a juror in the Breonna Taylor case who claims the attorney general mischaracterized the panel’s deliberation came forward via his attorney. It’s the latest ripple in this complicated case which has left the community in Louisville frayed: nytimes.com/2020/09/28/us/…
2. The juror, who remains unidentified, is asking in a court motion to be allowed to speak publicly in order to set the record straight. He’s also asking for the attorney general to release the transcripts of last week’s proceedings so that the public can judge for themselves
3. Yesterday evening, less than an hour after the juror’s complaint was filed with the court, @nytimes was the first to sit down with the juror’s attorney to understand what happened. The juror came to him Friday, two days after the panel disbanded. He was confused & “in turmoil”
Read 8 tweets
25 Sep 20
1. Big news out of Canada: Abu Huzayfah has been arrested on a terrorist “hoax” charge. The narrative tension of our podcast “Caliphate” is the question of whether his account is true. In Chapter 6 we explain the conflicting strands of his story, and what we can and can’t confirm
2. Below is a link to Chapter 6, which exposes both what we know he lied about, explores the conundrum of what to do when you discover that a source has lied, and lays out for readers what we know to be fact and equally the many things we still don’t know
nytimes.com/2018/09/20/pod…
3. Among my enduring questions - the question that we ended the podcast with - is the puzzle of why the Canadian government never charged him? I could never get a straight answer from the RCMP or CSIS. The fact that he was radicalized and pro-ISIS is all over his social media.
Read 10 tweets

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