Abstract
The topic of this academic review is settler slogans that mandate colonial school policy in North America. Also discussed is Indigenous futurity as a strategy for transforming education and countering the educational harm that comes from weaponized language. Beginning in 1887, the US federal government authorized colonial schooling, using the dangerous educational cliché “Kill the Indian in him, and save the man.” The purpose of this article was to illuminate this weaponizing rhetoric in education, which served as a guiding principle for imposing Indigenous assimilation that manifested as federal policy in the Americas. Research questions were, How did the kill-and-save slogan shape US and Canadian education and policy? How can the concept of Indigenous futurity improve Indigenous education? Colonial settler efforts to control tribal nations with weaponizing rhetoric leveled at education policy, public perception,and compulsory boarding/residential schools are exposed. Peer-reviewed studies were read, with analysis of 51 sources, many authored by Indigenous academics. Resultant cultural genocide, systemic discrimination, and educational disparity are described. Indigenous resistance to settler ideologies, policies, and settlements, as well as assertions of tribal rights, freedom, and sovereignty, reflect patterns in the material analyzed. Modern-day empowerment of society’s most vulnerable ethnic group requires a deep rethinking of schooling processes. Debunking settler futurity, the lesser-known Indigenous view of futurity looks to sustaining Indigenous communities and calls on society for amends.
Keywords
Introduction
This academic review discusses the slogan “kill the Indian in him, and save the man” within the Americas’ education policy contexts. The purpose of this article was to illuminate this weaponizing rhetoric in education, which served as a guiding principle for imposing Indigenous assimilation that manifested as federal policy in the Americas. Research questions were, How did the kill-and-save slogan shape US and Canadian education and policy? How can the concept of Indigenous futurity improve Indigenous education? Lingering effects of colonialism are scrutinized and juxtaposed with settler and Indigenous views. Marginality, powerlessness, and mortality are issues in this discussion, but Indigenous scholars and leaders also look to the future while remembering the past, imagining both strategies and possibilities for renewing tribal nations and society. As such, the hateful cliché sits within a discourse of Indigenous struggle, resistance, hope, and imagination.
Herein I argue that the kill-and-save educational slogan, and other common ones like “kill the Indian in child,” is not empty rhetoric from times past. Instead, such slogans that have been reflected historically in education policy linger, with lasting impacts seen through intergenerational trauma and cultural genocide. The systemic effects force Indigenous communities to focus on decolonizing education, seeking reparations, and educating about the ongoing legacy of the boarding systems on tribal nations in the Americas. (Americas is used interchangeably with North America herein.) The other crucial part of this argument is that the future has special meaning around confronting settler futurity’s stake in colonial control, power, and racialization. Indigenous futurity involves goals of sustainability and self-determination that center values like impacting generations to come, taking on challenges, and building for tomorrow (Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, 2013; Tuck and Yang, 2012).
Educational slogans that operate as a central tool of power and control conceal hidden motives while being disguised as something else (Kodelja, 2023). Building on Sardoč’s (2021) theorizing, underlying the present writing is the assertion that “thought-terminating clichés”—used in government initiatives and education policy and discourse—negatively impact justice, goodness, opportunity, and wellbeing. “Erasure of racial difference,” according to Sardoč, has been presented by colonial governments, schooling systems, and education policies as a benevolent approach to resocialize Indigenous communities, thus the kill-and-save slogan warrants scrutiny.
Allyship is necessary for solidarity and a better future. Despite good intentions and work, allies participate in “illegal and violent occupation of Indigenous land [amounting] to genocide [of] many Indigenous communities” (Kouri, 2020, p. 57). As a citizen of the US and Canada and researcher of social (tribal) justice, I study patterns in both countries. With reference to settler ethics, I locate myself as a beneficiary of settler colonialism and ally asserting the inherent sovereignty and rights of tribal nations. Quoting a reviewer of this paper, while my “work positions non-Indigenous settlers as important parts of the way forward, such allies should not be centered in the work” but rather “truth and reconciliation.” This statement describes my intentions as a non-Indigenous author engaged in consciousness-raising around honoring the truth and reconciling for the future.
Methods
Peer-reviewed studies selected for analysis span 1963 to July 2023. Databases (e.g., EBSCOhost) and Google Scholar were searched using key terms: boarding/residential schools, Canada, colonial schooling, futurity, genocide, Indigenous, “kill the Indian in him, and save the man,” policy, slogan, and United States. Out of the resulting 395 selected abstracts, 119 sources were analyzed. Regarding the 51 sources incorporated in this review, based on the evidentiary trail from documents and websites, at least 17 of the individuals identify as Indigenous (Battiste, Child, Coulthard, Faircloth, Littlechild, Tuck, etc.), with tribal membership status among nine of these authors in the US and another eight in Canada. (This status has been disputed for two of the writers). About those cited for the boarding/residential school theme, Brenda Child is a descendant of boarding schools in the US, and Wilton Littlechild a residential school survivor of the Canadian system. Some others cited are self-declared settlers and allies: Angelina Castagno (US) and Avril Aitken (Canada) work directly with tribes on projects like Indigenous governance and nation building. Declarations, government legislation, critical writings, historical pieces, and news accounts integral to the arguments made are also included.
The synthesis of salient sources is North American based and limited in applicability. Therefore, limitations of this review are that it is not international or comprehensive in scope, and the results are not generalizable. Connections to other countries’ education policies of cultural genocide were not made because this exploration was designed around the US and Canada. Relative to Indigenous communities globally, however, some of the sources referenced do refer to issues in the international context.
Next, six resulting issues, which together address the research questions, follow: (a) forcible colonial schooling, (b) weaponizing rhetoric, (c) cultural genocide, (d) North American survivors, (e) educational repercussions, and (f) Indigenous futurity. An overarching idea is that colonial American hardship, a persistent reality, is countered with hope, strategy, and possibility for a viable future.
Forcible colonial schooling in the US
In 1869, when Republican Ulysses Grant became US president, settlers and tribes were clashing in the American West. Responding with Grant’s Peace Policy, Indigenous tribes were forced into reservations as a strategy for assimilating them into white society and making way for settlement and development. In the educational realm, Grant’s initiative led to the “boarding school system,” overseen by Christian missionaries (Smith, 2009, p. 5). From 1878 to 1918, this off-reservation Indian school system operated with federal policy sponsorship. Carlisle Indian School founder Brigadier General Richard Pratt (1840–1924) coined “kill the Indian in him, and save the man” in his 1892 convention speech (see Pratt, 1973) and frequently used the mantra thereafter.
Under the influence of Grant and Pratt, among other American political and military leaders, the US government removed children from their families and placed them into 357 Native American boarding schools: “For decades, the US took thousands of Native American children and enrolled them in [schools where they] were systematically stripped of their languages, customs, and culture.” Despite “accounts of neglect, abuse, and death,” these schools “became a blueprint for how the US government could forcibly assimilate native people into white America” (Chakraborty, 2019; Churchill, 2004).
Made to attend Indian Residential Schools, Indigenous children were indoctrinated with Christianity and “White cultural values.” Trained for “manual labor” and “domestic work,” they were deliberately “assimilated into the bottom of the socio-economic ladder,” and females were socialized to “lose” their leadership place “in Native communities” (Smith, 2009, pp. 5–6). Starving and imprisoned, the children labored under inhumane conditions (Dejong, 2007; Mullen, 2021). If caught speaking their native language or practicing their faith, they were beaten; many were raped by those in charge (Dejong, 2007; Smith, 2009).
Epidemics struck dozens of boarding schools—many died while in custody, away from their homelands. The great influenza pandemic of 1918–1919 hit the Native American population “hard” (Brady and Bahr, 2014; Child, 2000). “Thousands of children died in these schools” due to poor sanitary conditions, overcrowding, abuse, malnutrition, weakness from manual work programs, medical neglect, and suicide (Dejong, 2007; Smith, 2009, p. 7). Indigenous students’ death rates were over six times higher than other ethnic groups (Witte and Mero, 2008).
What was deemed an “‘Indian problem’ of sufficient magnitude to warrant a federal system of education to solve” (Dejong, 2007, p. 257) became “The Problem of Indian Administration” with the 1928 Meriam Report. It verified that “federal policies had been a disaster, [especially in] education” (Witte and Mero, p. 258). Following this report, tribes initiated Indian education reform recognizing their “inherent rights . . . to lay claim to their tribal and personal histories” (Native American Rights Fund, 2019, p. 17).
Weaponizing rhetoric of killing and saving
Pratt’s (1973) slogan was a rallying cry for white settlers. His paper spotlighted “pragmatic and frequently brutal methods for ‘civilizing’ the ‘savages’” and drew “analogies to the education and ‘civilizing’ of African Americans,” out of which an enslaved labor force advanced white society (American Social History Project, 2018). Throughout the 1880s, Pratt argued vehemently against the existence of tribal schools and native sovereignty in education that, as he put it, preyed upon the government for financial support for life in a chronic state of “helplessness.” He presented his Carlisle system and its “intelligent and industrious” schools as the nation’s charitable solution to “Americanizing the Indian” (in contrast with “purely Indian schools” that resist integration into American society).
The harmful refrain “KILL the Indian” was repeated by Pratt to legitimate robbing the original descendants of their dignity and aspirations and destroying any inclination to claim an inherent right to land and resources. The word “kill” implied that violence could achieve this goal. “SAVE the man,” also strategic, manipulated an uninformed public into thinking that Indigenous Americans were savages, and that the boarding schools were granting them a life and future by integrating and saving them (Heath, 2017). Thus, the public was led to believe that Indigenous children were being transformed into better people and that through proper, disciplined education and religious training they had prospects in life.
Quite possibly, the 1776 Declaration of Independence buoyed the slogan. In this cherished founding document, the violent phrase “merciless Indian savages” follows the famously inclusive statement, “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal.” “Merciless Indian savages” may have been among the influences emboldening Pratt’s murder chant. According to Charles (2018), many people today are likely unaware of this white supremacist thinking in the Declaration, yet “Indian savages” remains a long-standing cliché.
Contemporary scholars describe Pratt’s motivation as wanting to erode Indigenous communities and culture and, through widespread educational intervention, engineering America’s great social experiment (Churchill, 2004; Smith, 2009). His slogan was used to rationalize assimilationist policy and practice, thereby legalizing and validating settler state colonialism and its ravages (Churchill, 2004). To Bowes (2018), Pratt’s phrase ominously “asserted the figurative death of Indians through civilization” (p. 3), which has been deemed culturicide in its destructive repercussions (Coulthard, 2014; Dejong, 2007; Smith, 2009).
Cultural genocide of indigenous communities
The influential campaign led by Pratt did in fact establish the conditions for cultural genocide and promote the effects. A particularly egregious form of “colonizing legacy,” “boarding school policies directed at Indigenous peoples globally have infringed upon [their] right to self-determination” (Khalifa et al., 2019; Smith, 2009, p: 48). The government-sanctioned policy crusade birthed a settler system that enlisted leaders in the “educational subjugation of all tribes” (Witte and Mero, 2008: p: 208). Pratt was convinced “that Indian children were the key to controlling the permanent future of Indian relations and to making a so-called primitive people ‘productive’ [during America’s] Industrial Revolution” (p. 208). This logic sustained suffering, exposure to “deadly contagious diseases” (p. 257), and many children’s deaths (Witte and Mero, 2008).
Because physical genocide would cost more, cultural genocide was preferred (Coulthard, 2014; Dejong, 2007; Smith, 2009). Cultural genocide of Indigenous communities—flourishing in this colonial period—is recognized as wholesale targeted annihilation (Chakraborty, 2019; Child, 2000; Churchill, 2004; Coulthard, 2014; Dejong, 2007; Mullen, 2021; Smith, 2006, 2009; Witte and Mero, 2008). Catalysts at the time included settler philosophies and ambitions, federal policies, leadership campaigns, church-run schools, and public ignorance.
Dissolving Indigenous ties by breaking up families was one systemic consequence. Other ongoing genocidal effects are (a) disbanded native cultural practices and languages and fractured identities; (b) sabotaged rights and responsibilities of Indigenous sovereignty over territories and on behalf of the upbringing, training, education, and wellbeing of their children; (c) educational inequality, racism, and marginalization encountered by Indigenous students in mainstream schools; and (d) disengagement, withdrawal, and attrition from high schools harboring racist attitudes and discrimination (Chakraborty, 2019; Child, 2000; Coulthard, 2014; Hare and Pidgeon, 2011).
It should not go unnoticed that the kill-and-save ethic of American colonial school policy had globalizing impacts in Canada. A government official advocated for Canada to “adopt a similar system to that of the United States’ founded upon Pratt” (Smith, 2009: p: 7). From 1879 to 1996 (with mandatory attendance from 1894 to 1947), the Canadian Indian residential school system enrolled 86,000 Indigenous children (McGregor, 2018). The goal was to “erase and replace” native culture and destroy Indigenous life (Coulthard, 2014).
Canadian residential school policy legitimated these children’s extraction from their families and placement in nationwide residential schools. In 1883, the Public Works Minister declared, “In order to educate the children properly, we must separate them from their families. Some people may say that this is hard but if we want to civilize them we must do that” (as cited in Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada [TRC], 2012). Following the US, the Canadian government funded this systemic racist program, administering it through Christian churches, in order to displace Indigenous communities and appropriate their lands; “Aboriginal policies” were used to dispose of the “Indian problem” (TRC, 2015). In Canada, abuse was reported as high as 100% in “some schools,” with a “death rate” of 24% among Indigenous children (Smith, 2009, p: 8), which amounted to 1 in 25 (6000) dying from the mandatory relocation (TRC, 2012).
Survivors of government programs
The governments’ compulsory assimilationist education programs in North America dispossessed Indigenous children for five generations (1880–1980). Half did not survive the boarding school experience, and those who did were forever scarred (Churchill, 2004). While the attempt to “civilize” the children was outlasted by tribes, 574 of which are now “federally recognized” in the US (Biden–Harris, 2021), genocidal effects linger. Survivors are “marked by trauma,” and successive generations live with racism and distrust federal governments and education systems (Churchill, 2004; Coulthard, 2014; Little, 2018).
Alcoholism, suicide, and transmission of trauma to children have led to social disintegration with genocidal consequences (Coulthard, 2014; Henderson and Wakeham, 2009; Sinclair et al., 2015; Smith, 2009). In addition, “racially-biased perceptions of Native families” contribute to children’s “separation” from parents through “child welfare services” and students’ “significant educational inequities” (Little, 2018).
Survivors call for “apology, compensation, healing, and reconciliation” (Henderson and Wakeham, 2009, pp: 5–6, 8). These long-awaited apologies for genocidal acts have made history when announced. In 2009, a US bill was passed constituting the federal government’s official apology to “all Native Peoples” (US Government, 2009, p: 1). However, too few countries have followed suit.
In 2007, the Canadian government’s Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA) recognized that the nation was still enduring its residential school legacy. It was also a public apology “to former boarding-school students and [payment of] reparations to survivors” (Sinclair et al., 2015). Ostensibly, the class action suit compensated former residents for damages incurred. Founded in 2008 by the IRSSA, the TRC of Canada (since defunct) shared survivors’ stories so the painful legacy would not be forgotten.
Kill-and-save slogan and policy repercussions
Pratt’s slogan has policy repercussions in education today. To Battiste (2008), a Mi’kmaw educator, Canadian “policies built on the supremacy of European heritages have left a legacy of trauma [in] an education system meant to ‘kill the Indian in the child’” (p: 1). Policy and legislative changes could be viewed by critics and allies as extremely delayed and overly cautious, as instruments of settler rhetoric, or as signs of reform, such as with respect to Canada’s 1982 constitution, which acknowledges reconciliation in the education of Indigenous peoples. This landmark Act “affirms Aboriginal and treaty rights” and governments’ and First Nations’ shared responsibility “to promote the distinct knowledge, traditions, and cultures” (Battiste, 2008, p: 81), yet Indigenous rights are not self-evident. They necessitate negotiation and agreements between tribes and the Government of Canada.
Critical Indigenous thought recognizes attitudes in education policy and dismissiveness of “a postcolonial agenda for transforming the relationship between Aboriginal peoples and Canadians” (Battiste, 2017). Continuing, Battiste pointed to Canada’s 1996 Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples’ study documenting “massive damages” to tribes—“major global losses in Indigenous languages and knowledge,” “persistent poverty,” and “low education,” with a bearing on employment.
In Canada, the TRC found that residential schooling’s protraction shows up as “significant disparities in education, income, and health between Aboriginal people and other Canadians,” condemning Indigenous communities to “troubled lives.” “Intense racism” and “systemic discrimination” are still realities, and the “beliefs and attitudes” justifying residential schooling continue to “animate official Aboriginal policy” (Sinclair et al., 2015).
Educational trends indicate perpetual disparity and low academic attainment in the US and Canada for Indigenous students (Faircloth and Tippeconnic, 2013; Gordon and White, 2014; Little, 2018; Mullen, 2021; United Nations, 2017), including: 1. A large achievement gap in educational levels (Indigenous school enrollments, performance, and literacy levels are all low while attrition is high.) 2. Substandard academic achievement compared with other racial/ethnic groups (e.g., educational trends in the US for American Indian and Alaska Native learners, who constitute 1% of the student population, indicate a stubborn trend; the graduation rate in school year 2017–2018 was 74%, with online classes a barrier in homes lacking Internet access) (National School Boards Association [NSBA], 2020). 3. A discrepancy in educational attainment due to ethnicity, parental education, low socioeconomic status, geography, and Internet connectivity. 4. Increasing numbers of Indigenous persons without a high school diploma.
A calamity of colonialism is the failure to equitably serve Indigenous students (Castagno and Brayboy, 2008; Hare and Pidgeon, 2011). High-stakes testing in North America has neither improved Indigenous academic achievement nor bolstered students’ cultural knowledge, identity, capital, and opportunities (McCarty, 2018). Low-income Indigenous youth struggle to gain postsecondary qualifications. Moreover, tribes face compounding barriers—low self-confidence, poor academic preparation, scarce financial resources, absence of educated role models, and campus racism—to accessing and completing education (secondary and postsecondary). Education, “child welfare, health, and justice systems have failed Aboriginal peoples profoundly” (McGregor, 2018, p: 813).
Widespread exclusionary and inappropriate schooling is common for Indigenous communities (Faircloth, 2020–2021), necessitating a reimagined development of leaders and teachers serving Native American students (Faircloth and Tippeconnic, 2015). The dropout of this ethnic group from secondary school remains high, and children’s reading and math proficiency scores are lower than national averages (NSBA, 2020). Also, severe penalties are experienced by them in chronically underfunded schools on and off reservations. Indigenous (“American Indian”) secondary students in the US are almost twice as likely to leave or not graduate on time than the national average (Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2020). Disproportionate failure and dropout rates for Canadian Indigenous students are similarly dismal. Boarding/residential schools failed to “kill the Indian” through coercive assimilation (Little, 2018) yet managed to design schooling cultures that silence and exclude.
The Americas’ First Peoples are its last in the punishing culture of high-stakes testing. The effects further demoralize the sporadic “culturally responsive educational efforts” made on behalf of Indigenous students (Battiste, 2017; Castagno and Brayboy, 2008, p: 942). Homogenizing cultural groups, test-centrism masks assimilation in education and defeats program capacity for meeting Indigenous peoples’ unique interests and needs. Falling under federal governments’ control, high-stakes testing jeopardizes tribal nations’ sovereignty over education and strains optimism for a better future (Castagno and Brayboy, 2008; McCarty, 2018). With the intensification of colonial paradigms of knowledge, culturally appropriate curricula and classroom approaches that honor distinct cultures become more remote. Schools’ capacity for delivering quality instruction is being stretched by the demands of not only test-heavy expectations but also increasingly diverse enrollments (Khalifa et al., 2019).
While K–12 homogenized classrooms reflect indifference to varying ethnicities, in culturally responsive settings, students’ knowledge, experiences, and performance styles are legitimized and their cultures and communities validated. Learning climates are geared toward engagement, participation, and achievement, without negative teacher bias. These spaces support Native American groups and their identities in strength-based, personalized environments where content and skills cohere with tribal rights, Indigenous worldviews, and learner needs (Castagno and Brayboy, 2008; Faircloth and Tippeconnic, 2013, 2015; Faircloth, 2020–2021). Critical work around settler policy and assumptions is demonstrated by faculty in preservice teacher and leader preparation programs (e.g., Aitken and Radford, 2018; Khalifa et al., 2019).
Indigenous futurity’s resistance to settler futurity
Indigenous futurity resists settler futurity and considers where Indigenous peoples have been and are going (Battiste, 2017; Mankiller, 2008; Tuck and Yang, 2012). As theorized, the future and its “horizon” are constructed in relation to the past, whereas with Indigenous futurity the future is fathomable (Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, 2013). Not only anticipated, the future is, importantly, acted upon in the present. Imagining and preparing for the future underscore Indigenous futurity as a source of hope, empowerment, and change in the realms of tribal sovereignty, solidarity, truth, reconciliation, and healing.
In colonial nations, Indigenous activists advocate for tribal identities, interests, and needs (Sinclair et al., 2015; Von Der Porten, 2012). Securing resources to uphold “fundamental rights” for advancing tribal control of education is a key area of Indigenous futurity that calls for “measures” by governments, Indigenous parents, and other parties. This statement of action, continued Battiste (2017), is consistent with the UN’s declarations directing Indigenous children’s education in global contexts around having respect for parents and their own culture’s identity, language, and values within environments protecting them against exclusion and discrimination.
Whether Indigenous scholars use “Indigenous futurity” explicitly (like Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández) or implicitly (like Battiste), it perhaps conveys “wokeness” by demonstrating crucial facts and issues of inequity that affect children’s lives and prospects. Futurity from a critical Indigenous vantage point confronts “cognitive imperialism” from brainwashing and internalizing “forced assimilation,” including the “false assumption of settler superiority” in education policy and curriculum; nationalism and market-based economies are values permeating a settler-imagined world that subjugate Indigenous values (Battiste, 2017). With Indigenous futurity, the future is anticipated by “seek[ing] to reconcile contemporary education” with the past and present and by countering “Eurocentric education” so that Indigenous peoples can “build their own present with their own agency and power intact” (Battiste, 2017; Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, 2013).
Indigenous futurity attempts to decolonize systems and nations, but, globally, tribal authority and rights only recently obtained some degree of recognition. In 2007, at the UN gathering where 143 countries voted in favor of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP, 2007) that endorses tribal sovereignty and decision-making authority over treaty and land rights, the US and Canada were dissenting nations. It was not until 2021 that the Declaration was ratified in Canada (Government of Canada, 2022), 14 years after its vote. The US Senate has yet to fully approve it, despite former President Obama’s announcement in 2011 that supported the Declaration. Recognizing Indigenous aspirations for prosperity and self-determination, and needing to further US policy relative to tribal issues were highlighted in Obama’s statement (US Department of State, 2011). A fundamental requirement within UNDRIP (2007) is that education should be accessible and culturally relevant for Indigenous peoples.
Tyranny disturbs tribal wellbeing, claims, and future and repudiates Indigenous futurity, extending to vision, systems, tenets, claims, policies, and legislation. Grievances of tribal nations include lack of (or insufficient) compensation for forcible Native American removal from homelands, compulsory off-reservation assimilationist education in deplorable conditions, and dispossession by federal governments of Indigenous territories in the name of national sovereignty fanned by the discrediting of tribal nations’ inherent rights.
Historically, national sovereignty guarded colonial settlers’ liberties and legacies by oppressing Indigenous communities. US “Supreme Court decisions from 1810 to 2005” invigorated the Christian European doctrine and system “that whoever discovered lands inhabited by non-Christian peoples would have the exclusive rights to ‘extinguish’ such [Indian] title” (Heath, 2017, pp: 115–117). “Possessory right to soil” casts tribes as wards of Indigenous homelands under government protection, meaning that “right of occupancy,” ruled by the courts and bestowed by the federal government, is “terminated at will” (p. 115).
Pratt’s historic slogan invigorates such settler futurity in that this future-oriented vision requires “erasure” of Indigenous cultures, including in school life. Indigenous futurity challenges this stance and its genocidal impact while creating momentum for Native American existence, renewal, and participation in society. Settler futurity seeks to completely eradicate “the original inhabitants of contested land”; in contrast, Indigenous futurity does not reject non-Indigenous peoples’ “inhabitation of Indigenous,” but does exclude “settler colonialism and settler epistemologies” (Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, 2013, p: 80).
Despite Indigenous requests for recognition of the injustices, settler colonists claim “innocence” to assuage guilt and wrongdoing while securing their own future (Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, 2013). This very dynamic plays out in contexts in which teaching for reconciliation is resisted by, for example, white settler preservice teachers who disavow any responsibility for resolution and healing (Aitken and Radford, 2018). At the macro level, settler futurity depends on a stable sense of nationhood and national sovereignty over land and people. The “controlling nature of state-granted sovereignty” is evidenced by “land claim agreements” that serve state interests (Von Der Porten, 2012, p: 5). In the colonial–settler imagination, Indigenous peoples gave their land to settlers for “safe-keeping,” and they agreed to be moved into permanent settlements (Tuck and Yang, 2012).
Recovering from past trauma, reconnecting to land, and establishing reconciliation galvanize Indigenous futurity. Land and education are cornerstones of reconciliation with society for Indigenous advocacy groups. Perhaps it can be said that education, like land, signifies recognition, fairness, respect, relationship, and opportunity. Indigenous leaders want governments and society to discontinue “justify[ing] European sovereignty over Indigenous lands and peoples” and “reform those laws [and policies] . . . that continue to rely on such strategies” (TRC, 2015, p: 5). The tribal reference point for education is, inescapably, land, and the framework for both is Indigenous sovereignty.
The creation of a vision for North American Indigenous peoples also incites introspection about what humanity can become, drawing on wisdom from experience. Importantly, vision-building involves what can be imagined, accomplished, and advanced in the present moment to cultivate a desired future. Futurity for Indigenous communities envisions people free to self-govern within cultures that nurture wellness, healing, and success (Mankiller, 2008). Because the meanings are nuanced and complicated among those committed to an “Indigenous future” (Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández, 2013), the futurity construct and associated meanings call for thoughtful unpacking beyond this paper.
The hope is that education can help break the cycle of colonialism and promote cultural and planetary sustainability. Persistent accounts of “culturally inappropriate education and poor academic outcomes for Indigenous students,” such as by Faircloth and Tippeconnic (2013), signal the need for systemic reform. They call on leaders and other stakeholders to “mobilize to effectively change the educational system,” and embrace the teaching and preparation of Indigenous students (pp. 484–485).
Indigenous peoples around the globe should have the same right to education as everyone else—free of discrimination and violence—and learning experiences that reflect their culture and respect their sovereignty (Castagno and Brayboy, 2008; UN, 2017). However, the “education sector not only mirrors and condenses the history of abuse and discrimination suffered by Indigenous peoples, but is also a locus of the continuing struggle for equality and respect for their rights” (UN, 2017). Consequently, racial differences in schooling outcomes are stark worldwide: “A significant disparity continues to occur in academic achievement and attainment between Indigenous [and non-Indigenous youth]” (Faircloth and Tippeconnic, 2013; Hare and Pidgeon, 2011, p: 94; NSBA, 2020). Migrant peoples and descendants, historical tribes, and urban Indians all face educational obstacles (UN, 2017).
Global nations carry the sting of tragic human rights abuses spurred by malicious slogans, policies, and programs (Coulthard, 2014; Sardoč, 2021). To advance Indigenous education and empower Native American leaders, teachers, and students, colonial structures of injustice must be systemically eroded. As such, tribal governance in the educational domain not only affirms Indigenous worldviews, knowledges, and values but also endorses tribal nations’ self-determination, human rights, and legitimate claims. As statistics, studies, and testimonials maintain, traditional schooling has not worked for many Indigenous students, who, as previously explained, show significant gaps in achievement and graduation (Faircloth and Tippeconnic, 2013; Gordon and White, 2014; NSBA, 2020). Public schools—lacking Native American Indigenous understandings of the world and worsened by racism (Hare and Pidgeon, 2011)—remain a European settlement walled off from the teachings of elders and village life.
Indigenous futurity is a strategy for altering entrenched patterns and directing the future. It imagines a defunct settler-native-slave relationship and renewed humanity. Tribal justice—a collective global responsibility—inspires introspection about humanity and what it will take for Indigenous futurity to be untangled from colonialism. Unity would result from shared goals, tribal governance, emancipatory vision, and remedied colonial wrongdoing. Educational institutions would profit from embracing Indigenous inclusion, achievement, and leadership at systemic levels. A world community in which tribes live life on their own terms is futurity’s essence (McCarty, 2018; Mullen, 2021).
Conclusion
With the persisting effects of Indian erasure and indoctrination in education policy and systems, the kill-and-save slogan justified examination. Historically, colonial governments, schooling systems, and education policies have presented killing-and-saving as a benevolent approach to resocializing Indigenous peoples to fit into white Christian society. As was my purpose, I have unpacked the kill-and-save slogan in critical literature on North American education colonial policy and practice. Underpinning my analysis was Sardoč’s (2021) theorizing around educational slogans/language in policy that eradicate minoritized groups’ rights and liberties, and perpetuate social injustices and equities.
Methodologically, this review was shaped around research questions, racist slogans, and education policy. Strategies used to locate applicable sources, prioritizing Indigenous-authored research, were clarified. The phrase (“kill the Indian in him, and save the man”), uttered in 1892 by Pratt (1973), was examined within the historic educational and policy contexts of colonial treatments of Indigenous peoples in the Americas. The kill-and-save policy that originated in the US was later implemented in Canada.
As revealed through my analysis, the kill-and-save slogan—weaponized beyond borders—perpetuated colonial school policies and their destruction of lives over generations. While this line of thought may be familiar in academic circles, contributors to the critical discourse elucidate not only genocidal intentions and repercussions of horrifying slogans in colonial education policy but also perspectives on Indigenous futurity in policy and practice. Such views have a vigorous stake in sovereignty, sustainability, and more. Debunking settler futurity, the lesser-known Indigenous view of futurity looks to sustaining Indigenous education and calls on society for amends. A futurity cognizance is at work in changing systems and impacting Indigenous generations to come (TRC, 2015; Tuck and Yang, 2012).
Regarding how my conclusions link to this article’s methodology, the research questions that guided my review of select sources favoring Indigenous authors concerned (a) the kill-and-save slogan tied to policy and (b) Indigenous futurity as relevant to education. As found for the first question, the authors directly or indirectly explained that the weaponizing slogan shaped US and Canadian education and policy mainly through forcible colonial schooling, weaponizing rhetoric, cultural genocide, and educational repercussions.
For the second question, the concept of Indigenous futurity was illuminated and, in fewer of the writings, connected to Indigenous education. As conveyed, futurity in education was seen through the lens of survivors of government programs, as well as resistance to colonial settler futurity and focus on a sustainable future for Indigenous communities. Outlasting the dangerous compulsion of nations to extinguish their cultures, Indigenous peoples seek redress, reconciliation, and healing that necessitate resilience, solidarity, and sustainability. Systemic change through education policy fulfills the dual role of supporting Indigenous culture and sovereignty. Teaching in culturally appropriate ways that acknowledge colonial histories and graduating Indigenous students prepared for life is only one part of the equation (Faircloth and Tippeconnic, 2013). The past is still present, which is why school leaders need to be educated in ways that confront systemic disorders in such forms as racial hierarchies that marginalize some and privilege others.
Implications
Some implications of the actual conclusions reached by my analysis are worth noting. Consider that “kill the Indian in him, and save the man” spread like wildfire, and “racially-based separation of children from their parents is still a problem” in North America (Little, 2018). In the 1960s, Martin Luther King (1963/2000) addressed cultural genocide, stating that racism targeting “the nonwhite” was a foundation upon which the Americas grew and that “our children are still taught to respect the violence which reduced a red-skinned people . . . into a few fragmented groups herded into impoverished reservations” (p. 120). The brutal history cannot be sealed off in memory or books. A microcosm of systemic illnesses, public education needs radical attention and change.
A Mohawk proverb—“it is hard to see the future with tears in your eyes”—invokes Indigenous futurity, that is, the truth of genocide and opportunities of futurity. Mankiller (2008), the Cherokee Nation’s first female chief, shared, “[This maxim] speaks for all our nations,” understanding it to mean having the wisdom to carry on in life not grief-struck but with hope and love. “Despite everything,” she declared, Indigenous peoples today can still “dream of a future in which all people will support [their] human rights and self-determination. Land and resources can be colonized [but not dreams].” Living in a global sphere as Indigenous leaders, she expounded, involves “articulating our own vision of the future,” “looking within our communities,” and “sharing traditional knowledge and best practices.” Such statements rest on her premise that having control over their lives helps Indigenous people to do better.
An implication of this review is that much work lies ahead in the sphere of policy futures in education on behalf of Indigenous cultures. Society’s moral obligation for ensuring equitable policy and rights extends to culturally responsive education, anti-racist systems, and non-discriminatory practice. Signaling commitment to racial equity and affirming tribal sovereignty and self-determination as an urgent US priority, the Biden–Harris Administration took action to support and honor Indigenous communities by way of Executive Order, such as by “advancing Native American education” (The White House, 2021). However, in the context of American education, the stunning decision to outlaw race-based affirmative action in college admissions made by the US Supreme Court in June 2023 has already adversely affected Black and Indigenous enrollment, and is expected to decrease students of color at higher education institutions by 23% or more (Rios, 2023). The past is still present, per this ruling—a wake-up call. With the dismantling of race-conscious policies as but one instance of systemic marginalization afoot, colonialism deserves ongoing attention.
Finally, in a divisive political climate, beyond remedying grievances, all citizens are responsible for creating a just world built upon reconciliation, transformation, and healing. Repressions from settler slogans are felt in the Americas. Humanity’s sense of futurity should imagine a world beyond colonial education and policy. Indigenous peoples must be respected and protected from the educational harm that comes from weaponized language.
Footnotes
Acknowledgements
The reviewers’ constructive feedback is appreciated.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
