The
human race has a tendency to view itself as the object of misfortune. As the
famous saying goes, “The grass is always greener on the other side.” People
always think others lead better, easier lives. Reading Sherman Alexie’s stories
enlightened me to the cruelties and harsh treatment Native Americans face.
Native
Americans have been bullied and pushed around to other peoples’ wills ever
since Christopher Columbus arrived in 1492 and “discovered America,” claiming
it as Europe’s New World. Soon after, more and more Europeans settled in the
Americas, spreading their diseases, infecting and killing Native Americans off
in masses. As European nations began warring for the New World, Native Americans
were tangled in these foreign affairs and forced to choose sides over and over
again. Once colonists won the revolution and continued their westward expansion
with Manifest Destiny, Native Americans were continually forced from their
homelands and thrown in small reservations far away from tradition. They
suffered through the Trail of Tears, the Indian Removal Act of 1830, and the
suppressing of their culture. Today, with a miniscule population making up only
1.7% of the United States, Native Americans are largely forgotten, remembered
only once a year on camping trips to Yellowstone and in the cowboy vs. Indian
battles of innocent children.
Sherman
Alexie portrays the Native Americans and their alcohol-soaked, long-haired,
danger-filled stereotype with a personal passion. He shows how hurtful the
stereotype can be and also just how insignificant Native Americans are in the
mind of Americans. Alexie describes his father wasting away in alcohol and his
mother’s suffering, their constant lack of food, the racist comments and
marginalization by whites, and the uncertainty of the future he and other
Indians constantly faced. These experiences mark his life with sorrow and
loneliness. He is unable to fit into modern culture and mocked for his long
braid. Most of his cohort merely “looks back toward tradition” and reunites
over alcohol each week in order to escape the difficulties of life. Even the
night shift manager of 7-11 looks down upon Alexie and stereotypes him as
different and dangerous.
Alexie describes
the plight of the Native Americans with an intensely intimate understanding. However,
despite all of this, Alexie shows that each culture has its own difficulties;
while he starved, white girls starved, too, forced by the expectations of their
own culture. Each culture faces its own stereotypes and demons. Though the
grass might seem greener on the other side, it is most likely not.
APUSH has taught you well
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