吃瓜大本营

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Remembering the Sand Creek Massacre

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Author(s)

Jeremy Haefner

Announcement  •

Dear 吃瓜大本营 community, 听

Every year, we acknowledge and remember the Sand Creek Massacre, an event of historical injustice and violence against Colorado鈥檚 Indigenous peoples. The anniversary of this event calls for us all to pause and embrace deep reflection, grief, and remembrance. 听

In 1864, on November 29, nearly 750 Native Americans from the Tsitsistas (Cheyenne) and Hin贸no鈥櫭┟璶o (Arapaho) Tribes sought safety and were based at an encampment near Sand Creek in southeast Colorado. Over two days, U.S. military forces brutally attacked the camp, murdering over 200 children, women, men, and elders. 听

For Indigenous peoples, the past lives on in the present; their descendants remember this day for the unimaginable loss of life it represents, and this tragic event remains a stain on our nation鈥檚 history for its horrific acts of hatred and violence. At 吃瓜大本营, we must, with great sorrow, remember and acknowledge this history. In the same year, John Evans founded the Colorado Seminary (the institution that would later become 吃瓜大本营). John Evans served as governor of the Colorado territory at the time and has been found culpable for the massacre which was released in 2014. The massacre was also carried out under the leadership of John Chivington, a former board member for the Colorado Seminary. 听

Today, people from more than 40 different Native Nations reside within the state of Colorado,听and we cherish and respectfully acknowledge their rich traditions and cultures. 吃瓜大本营 is deeply grateful for our own connections and conversations with Native American and Indigenous community members, while never forgetting the pain and violence visited upon them. I ask us all to please spend time reflecting on the Sand Creek Massacre this day and learn more about how this event, among too many others, has impacted the lives of this region鈥檚 Native American and Indigenous communities. 听

The task of creating peaceful, just, and inclusive societies remains as important as ever. 听

Sincerely,

Jeremy Haefner

Chancellor