I
read a most unusual book, Homo Deus, by Yuval Noah Harari, an Israeli
historian who is on the Cambridge faculty. It has been a widely-read book in
the English speaking world. Many of the author’s assertions are not completely
credible, but there was one insight that drew my attention right away. As an
historian, the author naturally asked himself and his readers, of what value is
history? Why study it, why write about it? Many of you have personal interests
in history, perhaps because of where you live or your family history. This is
why I write about Cherokee history. But why should anyone be interested in
history in general, or other peoples’ histories?
Harari’s
answer is simple and powerful. There are many problems of oppression and
injustice in the world today. The only way to solve these problems is for us to
re-imagine the future, a future in which we will have put these problems behind
us. I live in France, and I can see Germany from my window. But not once have I
had the slightest fear that a new crop of Nazis will coming marching or sailing
over the Rhine. That was what happened eighty years ago, but Europe re-imagined
its future, a future without aggression and war. It worked.
And
the first step to re-imagining the future is to retell our history. Harari said
on page 69, “Movements seeking to change the world often begin by rewriting
history, thereby enabling people to reimagine the future.”
And
this is what I am doing in my book, now in press and due out in July 2025, Forgotten
Landscapes. I will tell you a lot more about it as its publication draws
closer.
One
major problem in America, often overlooked, is the continued oppression of
Native Americans. And one major reason for it is that American culture, in
general, dismisses Native American tribes as dirt-colored drunks passed out in
the ditch on the Rez in flyover country. This image makes Native American
progress sound totally hopeless.
And
this image emerges from an historical mythology. One of the dominant,
foundational myths of American culture is that Europeans came across the
Atlantic and found a continent that was sparsely inhabited by savage
hunter-gatherers who hunted deer and gathered nuts and berries, running through
the forest and leaving scarcely a footprint behind them. Europeans then took
the land, pushing Natives out of the way, but in the end the land was better
off for it, even for the Natives. God blessed the Europeans, and the Natives
too, by the Manifest Destiny of the United States.
This
version of American history is totally and verifiably wrong. Some books (for
example, by Dee Brown and Angie Debo) have tried to correct this false image,
mostly from the historical viewpoint. My book will also retell the story of
Native American history, and tell it accurately, this time including scientific
as well as historical information.
North
America was not sparsely populated by Natives. It was densely populated. A civilization
that was as highly developed as any in Europe or Asia had just collapsed when
Columbus came, but the economy of that civilization lived on, in a network of
large, healthy villages connected by strong trade networks. These large
villages were healthier than the cities of Europe. European soldiers would not
have been able to conquer America had it not been for their diseases, which
wiped out ninety percent of the Native population. Europeans also conquered
Africa and Asia. But today Asia is mostly Asian, and Africa mostly black, while
America is mostly white. And the reason for this is epidemic diseases.
Nor
were Natives hunter-gatherers who lived on in unaltered wilderness. Natives
transformed the entire landscape by the controlled use of fire, burning whole
forests and prairies. They controlled animal populations by hunting. They
relied upon agriculture, including by means of irrigation and orchards.
I
am not the first to write about this, but other books have been lost in the
scholarly literature. They include Forgotten Fires by Omer C. Stewart
and America’s Ancient Forests by Thomas M. Bonnicksen.
My book will be, as far as I am aware, the first time this story about Native
transformation of the American landscape has been told for a popular audience.
I
provide documentation for all of these things. In this book, I have retold
Native American history and got it correct this time. This will be my
contribution to a popular rethinking of Native Americans and their ongoing
oppression today.
It
is equally incorrect to depict Native Americans as having lived in perfect
harmony with their environments, something about which numerous books have been
published. Natives changed their environments and sometimes degraded them. But
the myth of the eco-friendly tribesmen is not a dangerous myth, unlike the
primitive-savage myth that dominates American thinking and keeps Native tribes
in ongoing repression, poverty, and obscurity.
I
hope that my book will have an impact similar to that of Killers of the
Flower Moon by David Grann, which revealed how, even in the twentieth
century when most white Americans assumed the Indian Wars were over, members of
the Osage tribe were murdered so that whites could get their oil rights.
Although I cannot hope that Martin Scorsese will make a movie from my book.