Subject: Yeah, a few things.
Author:
Posted on: 2016-05-14 01:00:00 UTC
What Juliette (DJ?) has said is a big part of it. But also . . .
One: My friend Grace pointed this out. To have white wizards from England come to America, then a school is set up under their traditions, and yet colonialism is brushed aside as "they just got along" feels wrong to me.
Two: Boarding Schools to American Indian tribes have an utterly horrific connotation - it's where kids were forcibly taken from their parents and sent off to unlearn their language, tradition, and religion. They were beaten for speaking their own language, very, very often physically and sexually abused, and treated as a rent-able workforce for the surrounding community… while being taught skills to occupy the lowest rungs on the wage-ladder, since it was never assume they would be capable of college. The death and disease rates were astronomical. Running away is a common narrative.
I will note that some tribes later took possession of these schools and turned them into real schools for the tribe. That's pretty rare, though, and it was done while remembering the history that brought them there. To take a boarding school for wizard kids in America and slap tribal symbols on it out of context, without a single reference to that trauma, is utterly wrong.
Three; There were at least five hundred different nations on this continent before it was "discovered." Thunderbirds mean something to some of them, something else to others, and nothing at all to others. Again, you cannot take these symbols out of context, or they lose all meaning. Are we talking about Hopi/Pueblo Thinderbirds? Diné Thunderbirds? Paiute? Or Dakota, Lakota, Oglala? And if you're making a school for the Algonquian peoples, Thinderbird makes significantly less sense than, say, Whale and Snake.
Four: American Indian religions are STILL treated with disrespect in much of this country. We still say "shaman" or "wizard" or what have you when we mean "Medicine man/woman." This system also disregards that practice.
That's what I've got off the top of my head.