Bookbot

Finding Right Relations: Quakers, Native Americans, and Settler Colonialism

Book rating

4.4(3)Add rating

Parameters

Pages
224 pages
Reading time
8 hours

More about the book

Quakers were one of the early settler colonist groups to invade northeastern North America. William Penn set out to develop a “Holy Experiment,” or utopian colony, in what is now Pennsylvania. Here, he thought, his settler colonists would live in harmony with the Indigenous Lenape and other settler colonists.Centering on the relationship between Quaker colonists and the Lenape people, Finding Right Relations explores the contradictory position of the Quakers as both egalitarian, pacifist people, and as settler colonists. This book explores major challenges to Quaker beliefs and resulting relations with American Indians from the mid-seventeenth century to the late nineteenth century. It shows how the Quakers not only failed to prevent settler colonial violence against American Indians but also perpetuated it. It provides historical examples such as the French and Indian War, the massacre of the Conestoga Indians, and the American Indian boarding schools to explore the power of colonialism to corrupt even those colonists with a belief system rooted in social justice.While this truth rubs against Quaker identity as pacifists and socially conscious, justice-minded people, the authors address how facing these truths provide ways forward for achieving restitution for the harms of the past. This book offers a path to truth telling that is essential to the healing process. 

Publication

Book purchase

Finding Right Relations: Quakers, Native Americans, and Settler Colonialism, Marianne O. Nielsen, Barbara M. Heather

Language
Released
2023
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback)
We’ll notify you via email once we track it down.

Payment methods

4.4
Very Good
3 Ratings

We’re missing your review here.