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Raising Luminaries creates workshops, training, and educational resources for parents & caregivers igniting the next generation of kind & courageous leaders.

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Home Book Collections Decolonizing Thanksgiving Is An Oxymoron – Kids Books Dismantling The Myth of a ‘First Thanksgiving’

Decolonizing Thanksgiving Is An Oxymoron – Kids Books Dismantling The Myth of a ‘First Thanksgiving’

via Ashia
Published: Updated: 97.5K views

[Image description: Illustration from ‘We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga’ by Traci Sorell & Frane Lessac, “depicting what looks like a family of eight people around a table for a meal, including two elderly people (grey/white hair, one of them balding on top), one baby in a high chair, two children on a bench, one of them feeding a cat between them. The people all have light brown skin, and other than the two elderly people, they all have black hair. They are wearing a variety of differently coloured clothes (blue, yellow, green, red, grey, orange), and the man standing next to the table is wearing an orange apron over his shirt and pants, with yellow swirls on it. On the back of the chair of one of the elderly people, there’s a hat with two feathers in it. There’s a framed picture on the wall in the background showing two people together.” / Gratitude to Charlotte Holzke for the lovely image description.]

In his post: Teach your kids the truth of Thanksgiving – modeling generosity and gratitude all year long – but don’t whitewash the violent history of colonization.


The Thanksgiving myth is based in theft and greed.

We want Thanksgiving to be a celebration of gratitude and generosity, a holiday celebrating diversity and togetherness.

But can we honestly do that if we’re celebrating the tragedy and despair of people we continue to harm?

We have no right to stay on this land without taking responsibility for what we’ve broken, and taking action to repair it.

My family still reaps the benefits of showing up on these shores with light skin and settler expectations, as European and Asian immigrants. Even if my ancestors aren’t the colonists who stole Wampanoag food stores and ravaged the graves of their children, my family is still complicit in the oppression of Indigenous Americans.

We wrestle with teaching my kids about the messy network of past and present injustice. We try to fit that into a vision of what we want for the future – a country that values immigrants, and inclusion.

On the 4th Thursday of November, we teach our kids to respect the people who stewarded this land before us, our obligations toward the Indigenous people still here, and to welcome those who have still yet to arrive.

It’s a lot to ask of parents – doing the daily work it takes to get dinner on the table, trying to grow into the people we want to be, and setting a better example for our kids.

I still don’t know what this day should look like. I want to come together as a family. I want to reinforce the value of generosity, appreciation, and connection to the land.

But I don’t want to erase our history or pretend this violence is over. It’s not.

Over the years, I wondered if it was possible to decolonize the holiday we settlers call Thanksgiving? After listening to Indigenous people with lifetimes of experience and sorrow- I’ve come to accept that this impossible.

Why are teaching kids that history doesn’t count until white people show up?

The doctrine that ours was the ‘first’ Thanksgiving is ridiculous. The Wampanoag people have been practicing a prayer of thanksgiving every day, (+ Algonkians have observed six Thanksgiving festivals each year) for thousands of years before Separatists came to the shores of what we currently call Massachusetts.

The one our kids are learning about in school was most certainly not the first.

We need to retire the white-centered holiday of Thanksgiving. This holiday erases and condones the damage we’ve done by coming to this land and continuing to occupy it.

After 350 years watching setter colonists give thanks for genocide against Indigenous people, Wampanoag leader Wamsutta initiated the first National Day of Mourning in 1970.

Continuing to observe a Thanksgiving with boisterous celebration (followed by rampant greed and disposable consumerism the next day) on the 4th Thursday of each November condones the damage we’ve done by busting in and forcefully removing the first people of this land.

Understanding our history acknowledges the agony and shame of our present – a vital step in fixing what’s broken.

Can we (and should we), as the descendants of colonist & settler immigrants, maintain a sense of safety and belonging while acknowledging the harm we’re doing by living here?

As a multiracial family, I want a sense of home for my children. I want them to feel like they belong to a community who accepts them. I don’t want my children to grow up feeling the way I did – like aliens in their birth land with no where else to go, unwelcome and resented on every single square inch of this planet.

For many reasons, packing up and leaving the country isn’t an option for us. If we choose to stay, however, it’s our moral obligation to do so without causing further harm.

So for now, we read books. We read books about our history that break our hearts. We focus on gratitude for what we’ve inherited. And responsibility for what we need to pay back. All of these, together, show us ways to heal the future.


A note on boosting Indigenous voices:

As a settler, I get very nervous about recommending books on Indigenous history & heritage. I was born and raised in the Boston area, where the Thanksgiving myth, ‘pilgrim’ pride, and erasure of the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe continues to this day. My classmates were proud descendants of Mayflower settlers and our high school mascot was a slaver ship. (Seriously.)

This is way outside my lane. But – it also gives me access to an audience that wouldn’t ordinarily pay attention to this stuff.

I could stay safe and silent, while less cautious parents blunder forth, spewing cheery Thanksgiving myths and Indigenous stereotypes that directly harm modern Indigenous people. That seems like a cowardly choice.

I chose the books below because they create an accessible bridge for my kids to start learning about the history of history and contemporary life for people whose heritage spans far beyond our arrival.

These books span cultures beyond US borders, since those same borders are byproduct of colonization. While I found, researched, and screened these books with my kids and processed them through our settler’s gaze, I tried to verify that my choices are respectful, accurate, and don’t cause more harm than good.

One of the ways I verified my choices was to check Deb Reese’s American Indians In Children’s Literature (with her permission) and invested in a copy of A Broken Flute by Doris Seale & Beverly Slapin. Check these resources out, as they go into great depth on problematic and recommended books that I don’t want to parrot here.

I’m trying to boost the best books, but not appropriate Indigenous research and voices. If I stray too far out of my lane, leave a comment with notes or corrections.

(Thanks to Monica R. for pointing out that our title was incomplete – I had assumed the title ‘Decolonizing Thanksgiving’  was a brain-teaser, but for new readers, we need to spell out how decolonizing a white institution is an oxymoron.)

 



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The Impact Of Colonization On Indigenous People

  • Crazy Horse’s Vision – The moderately violent massacre scene in this story gave our family lots to unpack and discuss. The story is also fantastic for setting positive expectations for leadership.
  • Shi-Shi-Etko – One girl’s experience being forced to attend a residential school. The sequel, Shin-Chi’s Canoe, is equally as good.
  • Buffalo Bird Girl – A rare women’s history biography beyond Pocahontas & Sacagawea. Includes real photos and blends cultural details of life in for a Hidasta woman with the story of a real woman.
  • The Gender Wheel – How discrimination and violence against intersex, two-spirit, nonbinary, and trans people is a byproduct of colonization.
  • Not My Girl – The impact of residential schools on Indigenous children who have lost their language, culture, and family connections.

invisible line



You might also like: Stop Lying To Your Kids About White Supremacy



Indigenous People & Sovereign Nations Are Still Here

  • What’s My Superpower? – Normalizing modern Indigenous kids in a cute story that takes place against in Nunavut.
  • My Heart Fills With Happiness – Celebrating modern connected with tradition.
  • Wild Berries – Gathering, connecting with the land, elders, on an ordinary blueberry picking day.
  • My Wounded Island – The impact of climate change and environmental racism on a young girl’s community – and the fear of cultural erasure that comes with it.
  • We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga – Life through the seasons celebrating modern Cherokee traditions.
  • We Sang You Home / Ka Kîweh Nikamôstamâtinân – In the style of of a lullaby for babies, celebrating the next generation in poetry that flew right over the heads of my (non-Indigenous) kids, but then again, we’re a very literal family and poetry is our kryptonite.
  • When We Were Alone – In oral tradition, a grandmother passes on the story of how she and her brother persevered and continue to resist the miseducation and abuse she faced in residential schools as a child.
  • Fry Bread – OH MY GOSH this book is perfection. Validating for multiracial Indigenous kids, with end notes clearing up misunderstandings about heritage, enrollment, and the disambiguation between Indigenous political status and race.

invisible line

invisible line

 



You might also like: Captivating Kids Stories To Recognize Privilege



Decolonizing & Restoring Connection To The Land

  • The People Shall Continue – A brief, powerful statement of history and endurance through colonization & continued attacks.
  • Beaver Steals Fire – I love this mainly for the foreword, which pulls back the Indigenous curtain a bit (rules set in place to keep stories safe from white distortion and appropriation) to help settlers understand the seasonality of stories and the byproduct of colonial arrogance and ignorance on our environment.
  • A Coyote Solstice Tale – A cheeky trickster story poking fun at materialistic consumerism over the holidays. More of a post-thanksgiving story, but it fits.
  • Also maybe check out Young Water Protectors: A Story About Standing Rock (I haven’t gotten my hands on this one yet.)



You might also like: Following Indigenous Calls to Action with We Are Water Protectors



Strength in Diversity – Inclusion Without Erasure

  • Her Right Foot – A little lofty, but beautiful reminder that our modern nation has been built stronger for diversity, and we must fight to keep striving for equity and inclusion.
  • Blue Sky White Stars – Gorgeous paintings depicting the diversity of American citizens.
  • Go Show The World – Mini biographies of influential Indigenous people who shaped our modern life.
  • Ladder To The Moon – A dreamlike story fostering inclusion for immigrants.
  • Dumpling Dreams – An immigrant story of integrating Northern Chinese cuisine into the American menu.
  • Brick By Brick – Caveat: this might not be for you. In the wrong hands, this can be alienating and reductive. A poem showing how the US government was literally built on the labor of enslaved Americans. The device starts with focusing on Black bodies (hands, etc.) before personalizing the people with names. If your family isn’t already educated on the exploitation of Black labor, try reading Heart And Soul first.


invisible line



You might also like: Immigrants Belong Here: Stop Stigmatizing Migration



We Are Stronger Together

  • 3 Balls Of Wool – This one isn’t US-based, but it’s still awesome and illustrates how unique perspectives make the world better.
  • The Sandwich Swap – How different cultures (in this case food) can seem foreign and strange, but actually enhance our relationships and give us new perspectives.
  • Peaceful Fights For Equal Rights – A rallying cry showing many ways we can all fight for justice, putting our own small efforts to create a bigger, collective change.



You might also like: Breaking Walls & Building Bridges – Kids Books About Collective Action



Settlers: Learn About The Wampanoag People

The Wampanoag tribe were the first to encounter the European colonists who settled on on what’s now Massachusetts. Pretty much everything you’ve heard about ‘pilgrims’ (or as they were called before the cheery rebranding then ‘separatists’) is a spun truth or outright lie. The education I received as a child in the MA public school system, and the stories my own son is being taught today in that same system make no damn sense at all.

The picture books we read feature holes you could sail the Mayflower through. Painting the violent, greedy behavior of the Separatists as friendship created a deep dissonance for any reasonably attentive 5-year-old. Learning that this betrayal is the foundation for our home creates a quiet, rancid shame that can only be healed with honesty and action.

I could find only two books for the under-7 crowd on our local Wampanoag tribe – ones that aren’t viewed through the white gaze. Both are approved in A Broken Flute: The Native Experience in Books for Children. I’ll admit they are both didactic (best suited for a class discussion than story time) and weren’t engaging for my kids. But they will have to do until I find something enrapturing.

Hey while I have you – this same tribe – the Mashpee Wampanoag are under attack from the US government right now. Please call your senators and support S.2628 the Tribe Reservation Reaffirmation Act, which affects not just our tribe, but tribes across the US who are at risk of having even more land and rights stripped. IT IS 2018 – colonization is still in progress, and it’s your job to stop it.

  • Clambake – A modern Wampanoag tradition, showing kids that the Wampanoag are not just mythical beings from history, but actual neighbors and contemporaries.
  • 1621: A New Look At Thanksgiving – A didactic book on the Thanksgiving story, from the perspective of the Wampanoag tribe.
  • 28 Days – This one is a stretch. It’s the only picture book I’ve found that references Crispus Attucks, a Wampanoag abolitionist.
  • (Not pictured) I’ve also screened both Tapenum’s Day and Children of The Morning Light. Tapenum’s Day is listed in the ‘not recommended’ list by Oyate but I haven’t found info on why. Children of the Morning Light was written by an author who claimed connections to the Assonet Band of Wampanoag but has been identified as a charlatan by multiple sources. I will update this list if I find more.
  • Keepunumuk – a modern Wampanoag family tell the story of working in relation with the plants and animals to help newcomers.

Keepunumuk: Weeâchumun's Thanksgiving Story - Greendeer, Danielle



You might also like: Books To Help Kids Advocate For Immigrant Rights



Settlers: Understand Your History

Teach your kids what their ancestors went through to make a home here, and why it’s so important not to shut the borders down behind them.

  • Dreamers – A poetic retelling of the author’s experience navigating the US, tangentially addressing the poor immigration policies that break healthy circular migration.
  • Heart And Soul – Understand that some American ancestors came here on slave ships – not by choice, and the luxuries and freedoms we enjoy were built on their backs.
  • A Different Pond – An early morning in the life of Vietnamese refugees, keeping their heads down, trying to survive in the US.
  • Small Beauties – A reminder for my Irish family who seem so keep on shutting US borders to refugees – how hypocritical it would be to shut the door and lock it behind us.
  • The Journey – A heart-wrenching story of a mother and her children while they flee from violence across a terrifying and hostile journey.
  • My Name Is Not Refugee – A gentle walk-through for very young kids to help them empathize with kids just like them who must flee conflict.

invisible line


You might also like: Justifying Our Existence – Children’s Stories Featuring Multiracial Families


Take Responsibility For Our Local & Global Community

  • Be The Change – Take responsibility for your actions. A reminder that every single choice we make impacts those who have less than we do.
  • Shelter – Take responsibility for sheltering those in need, breaking past a scarcity mindset and a reminder that every one of us is vulnerable and will one day be in need of help.
  • Take The Time – Take responsibility for how we treat each other. Small social actions to remind kids to slow down, connect with others, and acknowledge our mistakes.
  • Super Manny Cleans Up – Take responsibility for being a leader and healing harm you didn’t cause. On deciding to clean up and heal our local communities, particularly when no one else seems to notice, even if it’s not our fault.
  • If You Plant A Seed – Take responsibility for those with less. On sharing the fruits of our labor, even with those who don’t seem to deserve it.
  • Sharing The Bread – Take responsibility for our family responsibilities. This is the most US-centric  of the stories in this collection, featuring a white family in a settler homestead.
    We can understand complicity without demonizing settlers, this is a part of our history. For many Americans, this is a part of ancestral and cultural narrative. It’s okay to celebrate white-people traditions! (So long as it’s not the only perspective we show our kids.)
    The trouble with many books featuring white families on Thanksgiving is the addition of half-dressed, token Indians complete with feathers and face-paint. Or the complete erasure of colonial impact, suggesting that everyone is happy now that white folks are here. This book exists within a bubble, not out of oblivion, but as a mindful choice. Zietlow Miller stayed within her lane, choosing to focus on the smaller family dynamic, without painting settlers as saviors.
    There’s one page featuring kids constructing European buckled hats, which obviously is problematic – we’ve got enough glorification of invaders. However, it’s also an opportunity with the right knowledge – ask your kids what settlers are taught from the dominant narrative, and why the US chooses to celebrate European immigrants on Thanksgiving, but not immigrants from anywhere else. Use page this as a learning discussion. Each member of the family (regardless of age or gender) contributes and works together to build the meal, setting an expectation for responsibility. Now it’s our responsibility to work together in truth and reconciliation.

invisible line


Learn What It Means To Give Thanks Every Day

Before we can learn to create a culture of true equity, we’ve got to appreciate the privileges and opportunities we’ve inherited. Teaching kids like mine (who have been given everything I’ve ever wanted for them) to understand what it’s like to have less is a work-in-progress. This should be a 365 days a year thing, obviously.

At this age (4 & 6), we’re teaching them to be mindful of what’s going on around us, to understand the obstacles we don’t have to navigate, and to try not to take their luck for granted.

It’s worth noting, as our supporter Monica R. points out – this might be the one day when we should dial back the gratitude. Being thankful for what we have on this particular day is a celebration of all the things we’ve inherited at the cost of someone else.

  • Circle of Thanks – Connecting in mutual help through a chain of kind actions, featuring arctic animals. Written by an Alaskan author (who claims not affiliation on her biography), but I wasn’t able to verify accuracy in the illustrations and tone of this story, which portrays an Iñpiat-presenting mother and child.
  • The Table Where Rich People Sit – Demonstrating how wealth isn’t a bank account, it’s access to choice. How choosing our possessions and lifestyle with intent (when possible) gives us more to be grateful for than stuff.
  • Giving Thanks: A Native American Good Morning Message – My kids will. not. sit. still. for this one, but it’s widely recommended by Indigenous authors and critics. Most notably – how for many Indigenous tribes, thanksgiving is a daily act, which they have been practicing every single day for several thousand years, not something that should be reserved for once a year before a big shopping trip.
  • Greet The Dawn – Not a story so much as daily morning prayer of gratitude, you’ll have to prep kids with the understanding that this doesn’t have a beginning-middle-end, but is more of a song, of sorts. It’s gorgeous.
  • Originally this collection included the book Awesome Book Of Thanks  – but turns out the author is a turd, so let’s give that one a hard NOPE. I’ll continue to update the collection as we find better replacements. See the comments below for more.

invisible line



You might also like: Galvanizing Books About Poverty That Inspire Kids To Give Back



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Give generously – even if when you don’t expect anything in return. Especially to those who have nothing to give in return.



Stay Curious, Stand Brave & Celebrate In Gratitude

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21 comments

Jessica Olzak November 7, 2021 - 9:31 AM
1

Please add We Are Water Protectors to this list.

Reply
Ashia November 21, 2021 - 3:57 PM
1

Yup, it’s on there in it’s own article, here’s the post from last year.

Reply
Whitney November 27, 2020 - 8:42 AM
0

I liked this article very much but the author does not understand the term “decolonizing” as it is used among academics and anti-racist activists.

The title itself shows this but then she states: “Over the years, I wondered if it was possible to decolonize the holiday we settlers call Thanksgiving? After listening to Indigenous people with lifetimes of experience and sorrow- I’ve come to accept that this impossible.”

De-colonizing the curriculum, decolonizing the classroom, and so, “de-colonizing” Thanksgiving means to acknowledge the pain and injustice of white settler colonialism, its exploitive, racist and extractive systems of violence!

Decolonizing means calling out the white washing and the ongoing persistence of damaging white supremacy. Decolonizing means amplifying the voices of those that were colonized, oppressed, maimed, murdered, kidnapped, enslaved, raped and robbed (then and now).

There is a whole field of study called post-colonial theory that does this work critically, carefully and competently, so to claim it is impossible is to erase the good efforts of thousands of us engaged in this work now, chief among us, BIPOC scholars and educators.

As for the phrase “decolonizing thanksgiving” being an oxymoron, that is incorrect because the act of decolonizing, as explained above, does not contradict the practice of gratitude giving.

When we pay homage to the Mashpee Wampanoag ancestors, when we stand in solidarity today with people of indigenous descent, when speak for justice, repair & reparations, in true solidarity with those harmed by colonization & its legacies … we are doing the work of Thanksgiving.

Love the article & book suggestions. As a college professor, anti racism educator, activist and mother of an multi-racial six year old child, I’d love to see more articles like this… more resources for our children.

❤️???

Reply
Ashia November 28, 2020 - 4:16 PM
1

Thanks for your insight on this.

In the original article, I suggested ways to ‘decolonize’ the US idea of thanksgiving (in favor of understanding the traditional Indigenous concept behind ‘thanksgiving’) – but readers pointed me to several articles written by Indigenous scholars suggesting that ‘decolonizing’ such a colonist-created concept is fundamentally flawed, and updated the article to address that oxymoron.

So we’re working with a few different definitions of ‘decolonizing’ – the one I previously used from ABAR & critical theory (which is rooted in restorative justice practices, such as ‘acknowledging’), and the one I’m hearing from Indigenous readers, suggesting that decolonizing should be a *transformative* practice, which requires going down below to the root of it, not just acknowledging and truth, but into deeper reconciliation work and systemic change – a practice which requires abolishing the ‘first thanksgiving’ colonist practice entirely and reconciling a new path rooted in Indigenous Original Instructions & inclusive immigration reform.

Reply
Monica Cochran November 24, 2020 - 2:33 PM
1

A wonderful list! I’m sharing on my facebook page and with my families!

Reply
Digna November 24, 2020 - 8:52 AM
1

“That author is a turd”…lololol! Thank you for your honest and extensive list of work.

Reply
Amanda November 18, 2020 - 3:45 PM
1

Thank you for posting this list! I have so much to re-learn and am working hard to do that as I’m teaching my Covid homeschoolers this year. I’ve spent hours upon hours researching so we can try to understand the whole spectrum of events and peoples involved. The bravery it took for you to make a mistake in this share is exactly what we need to move forward. I hope my kids grow willing to learn, share loudly and be taken to school on facts when needed. This list is going to help us tremendously! Not so much of a child share, but this book has been invaluable to me for foundation: Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz’s An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States

Reply
Leslie Hamilton September 17, 2020 - 11:34 PM
1

This list is so needed. It is everything I have been looking for. Thank you. Sharing.

Reply
Kelly November 24, 2019 - 9:48 PM
1

This post is so fantastic!! Thank you. We have quite a few of these in an effort to bring truer and more well rounded histories of our country and its people, but there are also SO MANY I haven’t come across yet and I’m so thankful for your extensive work here.

I grew up in Southern California (so different colonial problematic history learned for me in terms of local people,) my MA history beyond the overview colonial perspectives I was taught in school is very limited. We currently live on the land of the Wampanoag and teaching my children a more whole and complete perspective about the treatment of indigenous people here is so important to me. I may have missed it (I looked again before troubling you) what were the two books for the under 7 crowd that you’d recommend about the Wampanoag people? We own The Wampanoag (A True Book series) which seems quite good.

Reply
Ashia November 27, 2019 - 10:35 AM
1

The books in the “learn about the Wampanoag People’ are all centering or include Wampanoag culture and history – Clambake, 1621, 28 Days, and with reservations, Tapenum’s Day. The reference to ‘two’ is just because I wrote that before I found more books to include and forgot to update the intro text. But all of these aren’t super engaging, so they’re hard reads for anyone under 6. I’m still searching for something better, and hoping to connect with the Wôpanaâk Reclamation Project to see what kinds of children’s books they’ve created since they started teaching the original language in schools.

Reply
Laura November 15, 2019 - 9:49 PM
1

Hi! Love this site and think this is a great list. Thank you for the work you do for inclusivity in children’s lit! I would like to suggest the removal of Dallas Clayton’s book about gratitude from your list – he has been credibly accused of r*pe in the past few years by several women and virtually all collaborations and work partnerships with him have since been terminated.

Reply
Ashia November 27, 2019 - 10:19 AM
1

Holy crap yikes. Thank you for letting me know! Updating now.

Reply
C November 2, 2019 - 4:49 PM
1

This is an excellent book list! Thank you! We have requested most of them from our library. One big question- if it’s not possible to decolonize Thanksgiving (a premise which I agree with), have you thought more about what the day actually looks like for your family then? I am struggling there. It is the one holiday all year that my partner normally has off of work, and we are invited to celebrate with extended family members. I don’t want to miss that opportunity to be together, but I also don’t want to whitewash the history by celebrating. I want to forge new traditions and a new way of being in the world for my children, but I don’t always see that way forward very clearly…

Reply
Ashia November 10, 2019 - 1:21 PM
0

That’s a hard thing to figure out, right? Especially for families like ours who don’t get vacation or weekends off to be together.

For us, we’ve started with slow changes and will continue to adapt more each year.

Our disabilities and the age of my kids makes traveling and participating in National Day of Mourning events impractical until the kids are older. Once we are able, we plan to join the UAINE in recognizing National Day of Mourning in Plymouth, MA. These kinds of events take place across the continent, so look for those first.

This is also the only time of year when we get to see certain family members. So we do plan to see them this year. This is an imperfect solution. Last year we stayed home, alone, and read books. That isolation didn’t really *help* though.

This year, we’re reading the books, talking about it with our kids, and talking with friends and family over dinner about the need to slowly adapt this day into something less festive and more respectful.

Reply
Michelle Stuntz October 16, 2019 - 10:35 AM
0

Thank you. I just went through this to select some books to buy and donate to my daughter’s preschool class. The school is pretty good when it comes to this topic – there are not pilgrim hats and feather headdresses as part of their Thanksgiving projects, etc., but some good books can always help. 🙂

Reply
caeli November 23, 2018 - 8:47 PM
0

Thank you SO much for this booklist!! We loved it.

Reply
Ashia November 26, 2018 - 12:02 PM
0

You’re welcome! I’m so glad it’s helpful <3

Reply
Stephanie Woodson November 18, 2018 - 10:26 PM
0

Thank you for this list! Trying to navigate how to introduce the topic to my young kids.

Reply
Ashia November 19, 2018 - 10:47 AM
0

You’re welcome! As you get deeper into the topic, I highly recommend checking out the website American Indians In Children’s Literature – it’s a fantastic resource for parents 🙂

Reply
Li Yun Alvarado November 10, 2018 - 5:18 PM
0

Thank you for this list! I just wrote a blog post about holiday picture books, and I’ve added a link back to this post because these are invaluable suggestions.

I find Thanksgiving so thorny that for my post, I chose books that focused on the Macy’s Parade (I’m a New Yorker) and the immigrants who made it possible and on two books about harvest and apple pies (my husband’s Thanksgiving specialty). I’m looking forward to incorporating some of these titles into my rotation.

Here’s the link to my post in case you’ve like to check it out: https://www.liyunalvarado.com/blog/holiday-picture-books

Reply
Ashia November 13, 2018 - 10:19 AM
0

Hi Li!

Thanks for this – I’m trying to sort through our enormous collection on holiday books and I’m so glad your post tells us about Dia de Los Reyes, which I didn’t know about! Thank you!

Reply

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Stay Curious, Stand Brave & Smash The Kyriarchy

Raising Luminaries reduces the workload on overworked caregivers
igniting the next generation of kind & courageous leaders

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Ashia (they/them or she/her)

Raising Luminaries is founded & run by me, Ashia Ray – an Autistic, multiracial (Chinese/Irish) 2nd-generation settler raising two children alongside my partner on the homelands of the Wampanoag and Massachusett people. I support families and educators in raising the next generation of kind & courageous leaders, so we can all smash the kyriarchy together.

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RAISING LUMINARIES

Raising Luminaries creates workshops, training, and educational resources for parents & caregivers igniting the next generation of kind & courageous leaders.

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Raising Luminaries is anchored in the land of the Wampanoag & Massachusett People.
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©2023 Ashia Ray of Raising Luminaries™. All rights reserved.

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Photographs via Unsplash & Illustrations via Storyset, used with permission.