I've tried to write
about historical trauma for 10 years. How can anyone write about
the effect that history has had on our bodies, our families, our
lands, our plants, animals and rivers in 700 words? Can
oppression kill love? And why is it some of us, but not all,
assume the burden strap and carry the grief for our peoples'
sufferings? Start with Maria Yellow Horse Brave Heart's
definition that helped to establish the very idea? Historical
trauma (HT) is cumulative, collective wounding across
generations “emanating from massive group trauma.”
For decades, native
peoples have sought to address this wounding as part of mental
health, also calling it intergenerational trauma, or
multigenerational unresolved grief. As Choctaw scholar Karina
Walters notes, “The trauma is targeted to the collective and the
collective experience it …The trauma is held personally and
transmitted over generations. Thus, even family members who have
not directly experienced the trauma can feel the effects of the
event generations later.” However, Walters' research shows that
not everyone experiences “historical trauma response.”
Over the years, I've
attended several conferences on historical trauma. The
conferences of the Takini Network of native healers, scholars
and therapists convened people such as Birgil Kills Straight,
Nadine Tafoya, Larry Emerson, Lemyra DeBruyn, Bonnie Duran and
Walters, who have helped establish an indigenous application of
HT. Much of the development of HT theory for native peoples has
its origins in this network when its members in the 1970's
became conscious of their own unresolved traumatic grief.
On one occasion,
Brave Heart recounted how she looked upon the photograph of her
ancestors and began to “sob uncontrollably.” A Jewish mentor
understood immediately, “That's genocide.” The experience of
Jewish Holocaust survivors and their offspring has helped native
peoples understand the Native American Holocaust. The
grandchildren suffered trauma just from having heard the stories
of their Jewish elders. And they are more likely to experience
post-traumatic stress disorder following a stressful event, thus
leading to intergenerational transmission of historical trauma.
In ceremonies, Brave Heart released the deepest grief and these
experiences lead her to develop the theory of Historical Trauma,
which now is one of the foundations of indigenous knowledge and
mental health, and as Walters says, is a “fact that needs to be
considered in post-traumatic stress disorder.” Walters has
developed a related concept to HT, that of Colonial Trauma
Response in either individuals or the collective. “Living under
colonialism and colonial structures puts you at risk,” she told
a Medical College of Wisconsin conference on the topic. And
she's referring to the racism and politics of the here and now
of the United States, the memories triggered in the s-word,
native mascots, or other desecrations, such as the road being
built through native shrines in Albuquerque and terminator
seeds. Yes, the earth is also a survivor of historical trauma.
The intellectual
development of HT is far more than can be addressed here. For
myself, it has led me to a most basic conclusion, that
historical trauma has shaken our ability to love. I'd like to
know, what happened to love? The ability to love -- to give it
and receive it and to know it beyond a fantasy jewel. I wonder
what love was like before boarding schools and forced
conversion. Trauma corrodes the better part of us, eating away
at the generosity still found among elders, a generosity of
spirit, of accepting and welcoming people on their own terms,
the sharing of yourself and the gifting of kindness.
Perhaps it's as
Eduardo Duran says, that trauma is a spirit that must be left
offerings so that it will be at peace. Leslie Marmon Silko has
written that there are spirits in stories and history. HT is
like the phantom pain of an amputated limb. Despite it all, it's
a miracle that we can, and do love, and still see the goodness
in another. Love may not be talked about, but it speaks in our
actions. Yes, to enjoy good relations, with our selves and
others, to care and to love is to change history.
I leave a few teas
to help as we seek to release the grief and wounding. Drink
boraja/borage during times of grief. It feeds the adrenal
glands. Drink tea of rosemary flowers to calm the brain. Drink
estafiate/mugwort, tila/linden and magnolia flower for the
liver, nerves and heart in a 1:1:1 ratio. A teaspoon of herbs to
one cup hot water. The plants will know what to do.
© Column of the
Americas 2006
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