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Historical
Lecture to the American People
Wednesday,
February 25, 2009
By
Ivan Simic

Every day we have the opportunity to read
articles,
opinions and news analysis from one group of the American people in which
they more or less express their will in very confusing ways. Many
of them do not know historical facts about their own country, not to mention
history of other countries.
Sometimes, they behave like the world did not exist
before the formation of the US; like Americans fell from the sky in 18th the century; and everything good that happened in the world happened because of
the United States. Many of these Americans often publicly criticize other
countries and nations, accusing them of injustice, genocide, the devaluation
of human rights, racism, war crimes, among others. However, they seem to
forget their own history, therefore, it is pertinent to remind them about few
very interesting things concerning U.S history.
The American Revolutionary War - the American War of
Independence (1775 – 1783).
The American Revolutionary War was
a war between the Kingdom of Great Britain and thirteen united former British
colonies, and not war between Americans and British as many
present in public. In 1776, during the American War of Independence,
British revolutionaries gained control of the thirteen united colonies and
declared independence from the Kingdom of Great Britain, claiming sovereignty
and rejecting any allegiance to the British monarchy. This act resulted as a
way for the United States to be officially recognized as the sovereign state
by the Treaty of Paris in 1783. Therefore, we can say the American
Revolutionary War was a civil war fought on colonized soil as a war between
British Crown and British rebels, with help of other immigrants from Africa,
Asia and Europe.
Pertaining to the US independence from Great Britain, the
US proclaimed independence first as a new nation: the United States of
America. Other countries did it much later. However, when it comes to
independence, there are similarities between the US and Sudan, Ghana, Nigeria,
Kenya, Zambia, Gambia, and India among others, gained independence from the Great
Britain. These countries were fully functioning countries before
colonization, the US was not. Therefore, the question that arises is: does Her
Majesty British Queen still have the document which makes her the owner of the
United States?
There is a strong believe in the United States that the
American Revolutionary War was a good war which brought freedom to the people
and gave birth to the U.S. Yes, it was, but only for the new American nation.
Many Americans forgot the other side of this war, the fact that the war
started as the war between the Kingdom of Great Britain and British rebels in
North America, and extended out to Europe and the European colonies, ending as
a global war between Britain, France, Spain and the Netherlands (Dutch
Republic).
The American Revolutionary War also left African-Americans
and Native Americans humiliated. African-Americans saw the revolution as a
fight for liberty and freedom from slavery, however, were wrong. Both Patriots
and Loyalist used African-Americans for their own cause.
African-Americans
More than 20,000 African-Americans such as Agrippa Hull
and Prince Hall sided with the Patriot cause. Around 5,000 black men served in
the Continental Army during the war, however, when George Washington took
command of the Continental Army in July 1775, he issued an order to recruiters
ordering them not to enroll "any deserter from the Ministerial army, nor
any stroller, Negro or vagabond", despite the fact that they had fought
side by side with their white counterparts at the battles of Lexington,
Concord and Bunker Hill.
In November 1775, the Royal Governor of Virginia, Lord
Dunmore issued a proclamation that he would free blacks who came to fight with
the British. By December 1775, the British army had 300 slaves wearing a
military uniform.
In response to Lord Dunmore's proclamation in 1776,
George Washington issued orders to the recruiters to re-enlist liberated
blacks who had already served in the army, and worried that these soldiers
might cross over to the British side. The British also feared that blacks with
weapons in their hands would start slave rebellions.
After the war, British loyalist left America with their
African slaves. There were about 2,500 African-Americans who belonged to the
White loyalists who remained slaves until slavery was abolished throughout the
British Empire in 1834. Blacks who sided with the British were registered to
the Book of Negroes, and were promised freedom. As the book came to close,
they sailed to London and Nova Scotia as a free people as others left for
Jamaica. Life for those who left for London and Nova Scotia was not easy;
therefore, in 1792, around 1,193 blacks left for West Africa.
The African-American Patriots who gave loyal service to
the Continental Army received no reward. In 1792, the United States Congress
formally excluded the African-Americans from military service, allowing only
"free able-bodied white male citizens" to serve in the military. An
estimated 100,000 African-Americans escaped, died or were killed during the
American Revolution.
One fifth of the total American population in 1776 was
enslaved, with about 500,000 black men, women and children. By 1860, there
were 3.5 million enslaved African-Americans in the United States due to the
Atlantic slave trade; another 500,000 African-Americans lived free across the
country. After 200 years of depression, African-Americans saw freedom in the
Civil Rights Movement, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the
Black Power movement.
Native Americans
In 1492, Columbus arrived in America and made his first
contact with indigenous people and marked the beginning of the persecution and
genocide of Native Americans. European colonization of the Americas and the rise
of the new US Government brought nothing but problems to Native Americans.
European explorers and settlers killed many Native
Americans, used force to expel them from their lands and brought infectious
diseases (chicken pox, smallpox and measles) to North America against which
the Native Americans had no natural immunity and medicine. Later,
American Revolutionary War tucks additional Native American lives. Most Native
American joined the struggle by siding with the British, hoping to use the
American Revolutionary War to stop the progress of colonial expansion
onto Native American land with some, however joining the revolutionaries.
In 1783, the British made peace with the Americans
with the
Treaty of Paris, through which they ceded vast areas of Native American territories
to the United States without informing the Native Americans, which immediately
lead to the Northwest Indian War. American
policy toward Native Americans continued to evolve after the American
Revolution. Native Americans, who fought with British against rebels were
treated as a conquered people who had lost their lands to the United States
Government. The Native Americans lost 5,000,000 acres (20,000 km2)
of land with just one rule by the State of New York.
The newly formed United States Government was eager to
expand, to develop farming and settlements in new areas. During American
expansion into the western frontier, one primary effort to destroy the Native
American way of life was the attempts of the US government to make farmers of
the Native Americans, to force them to adopt the practice of private property, to
built homes, to educate their children, and embrace Christianity. In addition,
one of the most extensive methods that destroyed their way of life was the
deliberate destruction of flora and fauna, and the slaughtering of buffalos, which the Native American used
for food.
In addition, President Andrew Jackson and United States
Congress passed the Indian Removal Act of 1830, which authorized the President
to conduct treaties to exchange Native American land east of the Mississippi
River for lands west of the river. In one word; it was a policy of the US
government to ethnically cleanse Native American tribes living east of the
Mississippi River to lands west of the river. The Removal
Act of 1830 set into motion a series of events which led to the "Trail of
Tears" in 1838; a forced march of the Cherokees, resulting in the
destruction of most of the Cherokee population. The age of “Manifest
Destiny” had serious consequences for Native Americans. Policy was put into
action to clear the land for white settlers. Methods used for their removal included
slaughter of villages by the military and also biological warfare. These
methods caused increased death of Native American, diseases, starvation, and
the destruction of their way of life.
By conservative estimates, the population of
Native
Americans prior to European contact was greater than 12 million. Today there
are around 2.8 million Native Americans living on the territory of the United
States, or around 0.8% of total population. In addition and in 2000, eight out
of ten
Americans with Native American ancestry were of mixed blood.
However, maybe the biggest historical question is: who
are Americans, really?
The majority of 306 million people currently living in
the United States consist of White Americans, who traced their ancestry to the
original peoples of Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. Most White
Americans are European Americans, descendants of immigrants who arrived since
the establishment of the first colonies.
According to the United States Census Bureau's report
from 2008; 68% of the US population are White Americans, 15% Hispanic, 12%
African Americans and 5% Asian Americans. This numbers are likely to change by
the year 2050 when White Americans will no longer be in the majority; 46% White
Americans, 30% Hispanic, 15% African American and 9% Asian American.
In the 2000 census, Americans were able to state their
ancestries; 7.2% of the US population was unaware about or could not
trace their ancestry, so they were counted as “Americans”. The most interesting
part was the fact that German ancestry counted 15.2% or 42,885,162 million of the
total population, African-Americans came second with 12.9% or 36,419,434. Also,
very interesting was the fact that in 1980 US Census 61.3 million Americans
reported British ancestry (English, Scottish, Scotch-Irish, Welsh); just two
decades later, that number is 36.4 million.
If we look back to political history, the ancestry of 42
US presidents is limited to the following seven heritages, or
some combination thereof: Dutch, English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Swiss, or
German. These include; John F. Kennedy (Irish), Franklin D.
Roosevelt (French and Dutch), Abraham Lincoln (English), Martin
Van Buren (Dutch), among others.
Eight Presidents were born British subjects:
George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe,
John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, and William Henry Harrison.
Therefore, our good friends and neighbors who like to
condemn others should remember these facts next time they decide to criticize
and lecture. They should address other countries and nations with respect,
because Americans, and the United States are the creation of older and astute
countries and nations. Americans are in fact Europeans, Africans and Asians.
Ivan Simic lives in Belgrade, Serbia. Address: Paloticeva 12,
11000 Belgrade, Serbia, Tel: +381 63
7508500.
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