
As fifth graders at Fort River School in Amherst last spring, weeks of research into a change they would like to see in the world prompted students to champion the idea of Indigenous Peoples Day becoming a state holiday.
On Oct. 3, three sixth graders brought their expertise on the topic to a state legislative hearing, offering testimony on Senate and House bills that would officially remove Columbus Day as a holiday on the second Monday in October each year and replace it with Indigenous Peoples Day.
“We believe it is wrong to honor someone who treated Indigenous people in terrible ways,” sixth grader Elo Schwabe told the members of the Joint Committee on State Administration and Regulatory Oversight.
Explaining that teacher Tim Austin’s language arts class that included a civic literacy and organizing project gave them the knowledge, sixth grader Afrah Sen said that the project began with students writing about the change they would like to see in the world, and this continued with a petition inside the school and at the Amherst Farmers Market that yielded well over 500 signatures,
While understanding concern about those who want Columbus Day to remain, sixth grader Nina Healey said that Columbus would still would be taught, “but hopefully in a more accurate away.”
“Columbus is important, he is a big part of history, but so are the people who were here before he arrived,” Nina said.
The Amherst students were among a number of speakers endorsing bills S.1976 and H.2989, sponsored by state Sen. Jo Comerford, D-Northampton, and state Rep. Christine Barber, D-Somerville.
Amherst and Northampton have both been celebrating Indigenous Peoples Day since 2016, with Amherst’s designation coming by a vote of its former representative Town Meeting, and the Northampton City Council adopting a proclamation. In doing so, they became the first two communities in the state to remove Christopher Columbus from the calendar, having since been followed by a number of other communities, though not yet the state itself.
Last spring Comerford and state Rep. Mindy Domb, D-Amherst, visited with the students in Austin’s class to learn more about their effort.
Comerford was the first to address the hearing as it got underway on Tuesday morning, speaking about the Indigenous Peoples Day bill, as well as other bills she has filed, including allowing multi-stall, gender-neutral bathrooms to be used in public buildings without getting a variance from the state plumbing code.
“Christopher Columbus did not discover the Americas,” Comerford said. “This is a myth, steeped in racism and violence, that has allowed history to credit a European man with discovering a land already teeming with societies.”
Comerford said Indigenous communities and tribal nations across the country and Massachusetts are calling on the Legislature to act, recognizing through their “courageous truth-telling” that the legacy of colonization is not worthy of extraordinary commemoration and memorialization of Columbus. In 20 states and the District of Columbia, Native American or Indigenous Peoples Day is observed, either in addition to or in replacement of Columbus Day, and in 2021 President Joe Biden became the first U.S. president to formally commemorate Indigenous Peoples Day with a presidential proclamation.
“I suggest Massachusetts must do the same,” Comerford said. “Let us change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day, a holiday to honor those who first settled this land. This holiday will pay rightful tribute to the contributions of Indigenous people in Massachusetts, past, present and future.”
Over the course of the morning and afternoon, representatives from various organizations, individuals and Native American activists also spoke about the near genocide of tribal people that Columbus and his men encountered, and the enslaved Indigenous people shipped across the Atlantic Ocean, speaking of brutality of Columbus’ invasion. Having Indigenous Peoples Day replace Columbus Day is a matter of repair, healing and reconciliation they urged.
Comerford also said “cheers for sixth graders from Fort River School” and noted the many wearing purple in support in the audience in Gardner Auditorium.
Whether the legislation will become law is unclear. Similar bills in the last legislative session were recommended favorably by the Joint Committee on State Administration and Regulatory Oversight.
There are critics, including Rep. Jeffrey Rosario Turco, D-Winthrop, who likened the proposed legislation to throwing Italian people under the bus. Turco also called the bills offensive and “an unfortunate approach to solving this problem” and referenced the horrors faced by Italian-Americans, including the 1891 lynching of 11 Italians in New Orleans for the killing of the city’s police chief.
“There is no need to pit groups against each other,” Turco said.


