HARRISBURG, Pa. — President Joe Biden designated a national monument at a former Native American boarding school in Pennsylvania on Monday to honor the resilience of Indigenous tribes whose children were forced to attend the school and hundreds of similar abusive institutions.
The creation of the Carlisle Federal Indian Boarding School National Monument — announced during a tribal leaders summit at the White House — is intended to confront what Biden referred to as a ''dark chapter'' in the nation's history.
''We're not about erasing history. We're about recognizing history — the good, the bad and the ugly,'' Biden said. ''I don't want people forgetting 10, 20, 30, 50 years from now and pretend it didn't happen.''
Thousands of Native children passed through the notorious Carlisle Indian Industrial School between 1879 and 1918, including Olympian Jim Thorpe. They came from dozens of tribes under forced assimilation policies that were meant to erase Native American traditions and ''civilize" the children so they would better fit into white society.
It was the first school of its type and became a template for a network of government-backed Native American boarding schools that ultimately expanded to at least 37 states and territories.
''About 7,800 children from more than 140 tribes were sent to Carlisle — stolen from their families, their tribes and their homelands. It was wrong making the Carlisle Indian school a national model,'' Biden told the White House summit.
Thorpe's great-grandson, James Thorpe Kossakowski, called Biden's designation an important and ''historic'' step toward broadening Americans' understanding of the federal government's forced assimilation policy.
''It's very emotional for me to walk around, to look at the area where my great-grandfather had gone through school, where he had met my great-grandmother, where they were married, where he stayed in his dorm room, where he worked out and trained,'' Kossakowski, 54, of Elburn, Illinois, said in an interview.