Reflecting on the ‘cultural annihilation’ of Indigenous youth ‘Away from Home’ brings a personalized touch to history BY KATHERINE LACAZE It’s a tragic part of American his- tory that many people are familiar with: the forced removal of Indigenous chil- dren from their homes only to be placed in boarding schools where they were sub- jected to intense conditioning intended to erase their cultural identity. If You Go ‘Away From Home: Native American Boarding School Stories’ Clatsop County Heritage Museum, 1618 Exchange St. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., daily until May 25 $5 per person However, “Away from Home: American Indian Boarding School Stories,” a tem- porary exhibition at the Clatsop County Historical Society’s Heritage Museum, personalizes the complicated narrative of atrocity, trauma, resistance and trans- formation in a way that is poignant and educational. “It very much humanizes it,” said Chel- sea Vaughn, the museum’s curator. “Away from Home,” which opened at the Heritage Museum on April 6 and runs through May 25, is a traveling exhibition developed by the National Endowment of the Humanities, Mid-America Arts Alli- ance and NEH on the Road. The Heri- tage Museum applied to be a seven-week host for the exhibition during its five-year tour to different locations throughout the U.S. This will be the only appearance of the exhibition in the Pacific Northwest in 2021. Featuring the exhibit is a unique oppor- tunity for the Heritage Museum, Vaughn said, adding, “We are a smaller, rural museum that often doesn’t house exhibits of this stature.” ‘Cultural annihilation’ In 2000, the Heard Museum in Phoe- nix, Arizona, opened “Remembering Our Indian School Days: The Boarding School Experience,” an exhibit which centered on the same subject. “Away from Home” is an update and expansion of that origi- nal work, with a focus on representing dif- ferent perspectives and the varying experi- 4 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Cumberland County Historical Society The student body of Carlisle Indian School in March 1892. ences of Indigenous children. The boarding school system originated in the early 1800s in the form of mission schools — run by religious denominations with support from the federal government — that were typically located in or near tribal communities. By the late 1800s, then-Commis- sioner of Indian Affairs Carl Schurz deter- mined it was more cost-effective to enroll a child for eight years of schooling than to kill them in warfare. The boarding school system became an impetus to shift from “actual annihilation to cultural annihila- tion,” Vaughn said. The first school was established in Car- lisle, Pennsylvania. By 1902, there were 25 federally operated facilities, including Chenawa Indian School in Salem. Thousands of children were taken from their families and communities through a variety of methods, from coercion to actual kidnapping, and placed in faraway board- ing schools, where they were assigned an Anglo-Saxon name and a number. “Away from Home” combines the voices and personal stories of multiple people affected by this violent ethnocen- tric practice. Students often had no familial National Archives and Record Administration See Page 5 Children pray before bedtime at Phoenix Indian School in June 1900. Students were forced to convert to Christianity at the boarding schools.