Pledges additional commitments to Native and Indigenous communities
Brown
University
Brown
University has established an official land acknowledgment that recognizes and
honors its location within the ancestral homelands of the Narragansett Indian
Tribe. Tribal lands in c. 1600 (Wikipedia)
The acknowledgment is one of five commitments Brown is making to build
understanding of the relationship between its campus community, Indigenous
peoples of the region and the land on which Brown is situated.
University
President Christina H. Paxson shared the land acknowledgment in a letter to the
Brown community on Tuesday, May 24. The acknowledgment reads:
“Brown
University is located in Providence, Rhode Island, on lands that are within the
ancestral homelands of the Narragansett Indian Tribe. We acknowledge that
beginning with colonization and continuing for centuries the Narragansett
Indian Tribe have been dispossessed of most of their ancestral lands in Rhode
Island by the actions of individuals and institutions. We acknowledge our
responsibility to understand and respond to those actions. The Narragansett
Indian Tribe, whose ancestors stewarded these lands with great care, continues
as a sovereign nation today. We commit to working together to honor our past
and build our future with truth.”
Paxson also outlined a set of commitments that arose from a year-long exploration by a Land Acknowledgment Working Group composed of University students, faculty and administrators, including members of the Narragansett Indian Tribe.
She wrote that acknowledging the complex, painful history of the land on which Brown sits is an important first step in what will be a years-long process of reckoning with the past and building relationships with the Narragansett Indian Tribe and other Native and Indigenous communities.
“Committing
to a set of actions to educate our community and support broader engagement
with the tribe and other Indigenous peoples of the region is critical to
understanding our shared history and developing strong relationships,” Paxson
wrote. “The deep reflection and historical context that accompanied the LAWG
recommendations laid the groundwork for the important work we’ll do as a
community.”
The
land acknowledgment, which is supported by the Narragansett Indian Tribe, is
part of the following five actions the University will take as it strengthens
relationships with local Native and Indigenous communities and peoples:
adopt
the official land acknowledgment statement, as well as providing education
and guidance for its optional use (while there are no requirements for its use,
guidance is offered for those who choose to offer land acknowledgments at
events and gatherings held in Providence);
commission
and support new original scholarship regarding the origins and founding of
Brown and its relationships to the Indigenous peoples in and around what is now
southern New England;
establish
a group to work closely with the Narragansett Indian Tribe to explore how Brown
can honor and memorialize its College Hill location as part of the homeland of
the Narragansett people;
support
increased educational opportunities and access for youth of the Narragansett
Indian Tribe and other tribal youth from New England;
and
increase investment in the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative
and the Native Americans at Brown student organization.
The
guidance for use of the land acknowledgment statement, as well as the full text
of the five actions the University will take, appears on a new land
acknowledgment website.
A
community process
The
commitments resulted from a year-long process that included research and
exploration of Indigenous history and culture by the Land Acknowledgment
Working Group, which Paxson formed in March 2021. The group’s work included
delving into bodies of scholarship, knowledge-building with members of the
University community and learning directly from the Narragansett Indian
Tribe.
Rae
Gould, executive director of Brown’s Native American and Indigenous Studies
Initiative, co-chaired the group. She said meetings began with conversations
about what land acknowledgments can and should accomplish, encompassing
discussion of existing land acknowledgment models from organizations and
institutions of higher education across the country. The group also engaged in
outreach, meeting with Narragansett Tribal Medicine Man and Historic
Preservation Officer John Brown on the tribal reservation in Charlestown and
engaging in regular dialogue with members of the Narragansett Tribe.
“I
think this work enabled all of us to think more deeply about what ‘land
acknowledgment’ can really mean,” Gould said, adding that it’s important that
the University understands it is only a first step toward building greater
understanding. “It needs to be more than a performative statement recited before
an event or gathering. It needs to have meaning and depth. It needs to help
respond to the history of dispossession in some way — and we can't determine
what that might mean in a few months or even a year. Figuring that out takes
time, patience and layers of conversations.”
Recognizing
the preliminary nature of the Land Acknowledgment Working Group’s findings, the
new scholarship commissioned by the University will include collaboration
between Indigenous peoples of the region and the John Carter Brown Library, the
University’s Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative and other
academic units at Brown.
The
working group’s recommendations, shared first with the Narragansett Tribe and
then with more than a dozen representatives from local tribal communities in
the region, included a brief history of the land where Brown’s Providence
campus now sits, from its Narragansett history to the 1636 arrival of Roger
Williams, an English-born minister who founded what would come to be known as
Providence. An illustration of Williams’ storied initial encounter with the
Narragansett people is depicted on the City of Providence seal, which decorates
one column of Brown’s Van Wickle Gates.
Executive
Vice President for Planning and Policy Russell Carey co-chaired the group with
Gould. He said the work offered a deeper understanding of history of the land
on which Brown is located, and he hopes both the acknowledgment and the work to
advance each of the commitments will offer that to the full community.
“I
hope our work will serve to inspire members of the Brown community to learn
more about the history of our region and to engage in efforts to strengthen our
relationship with the Narragansett Indian Tribe and other Indigenous peoples
throughout southern New England,” he said.
The
history and lived experience of the Narragansett was a contribution that Sherenté
Harris, a student enrolled in the Brown-RISD dual degree program,
felt it was important to make to the University’s exploration of land
acknowledgment. Harris is a member of the Narragansett Indian Tribe and was one
of two students who served on the Land Acknowledgment Working Group.
Harris,
who uses “they/them/their” pronouns, said the work of developing a land
acknowledgment “began brewing in my heart and my mind when I first arrived at
Brown” in 2018. They would often hear departments and groups at the University
recite individually developed land acknowledgments — and while Harris
appreciated those acknowledgments’ thoughtfulness, they also recognized that
some of the statements were historically inaccurate.
“If
land acknowledgments were to be given here at Brown, it was important to me
that they be based on historical fact,” Harris said. “Colonial documents
acknowledge that the Narragansett are the Indigenous people of Rhode Island.
Our oral history speaks to stories of us in this place since time immemorial.
And yet we’re often left out of the historical record. Being seen once more in
our homelands is crucial — it is what will allow us to uphold our rights as a
sovereign nation, to break free from intergenerational trauma and from the
oppressive systems that hold us down.”
Harris
said they and their cousin, Ph.D. student in history and fellow working group
member Kimonee Burke, were able to act as liaisons between tribal dignitaries
and the rest of the working group, strengthening the University’s relationship
with the Narragansett Tribe. Harris’ hope is that the group’s work ultimately
helps members of the tribe — and other Native and Indigenous communities — feel
more at home at Brown and in other places where they have been historically
underrepresented.
“There
are so many young, bright Narragansett people who have unfortunately not been
offered the opportunity to reach their truest potential,” Harris said. “I want
them to feel welcome here, to see people and landmarks and events that send the
message that they are accepted here.”
Ongoing
learning
Following
outreach to representatives from local tribal communities, the Brown campus
community was provided an opportunity for feedback and input on the group’s
recommendations over the course of the Spring 2022 semester. Paxson said that
faculty, students and staff strongly supported the recommendations, especially
endorsing the land acknowledgment, new investments in Native and Indigenous
studies and Indigenous students, and further education of the Brown community.
That
was no surprise to Gould, given the University’s past unflinching
reckoning with its historical entanglements with the
transatlantic slave trade, along with bold investigations of Indigenous slavery
and dispossession in the Americas by Associate Professor of History Linford Fisher and
by the Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice.
“Brown
has a history of engaging in difficult topics of social and historical
injustice,” Gould said. “We’re not afraid to face this head-on — it’s one thing
I admire about this University and value about working here.”
Paxson
said that beyond Brown’s existing commitments of support and education, the new
research and scholarship the University commissions may lead to new actions as
Brown builds a deeper understanding of disparate and connecting histories.
“I
am excited to begin efforts over the summer to establish a framework for
advancing Brown’s commitments,” Paxson said. “I look forward to the work we’ll
do together as a community in the months and years ahead.”