Neeta Satam

Photographer
  Spirit by Neeta Satam  Spirit by Neeta Satam  
Spirit
Location: Saint Louis
Nationality: Indian
Biography: About:  I am a freelance photographer and a National Geographic Explorer based in Mumbai and Saint Louis, Mo whose work explores the themes of cultural assimilation, the human condition, and the environment through photography. In 2021, I... MORE
Private Story
Spirit
Copyright Neeta Satam 2024
Updated Dec 2018
Today there are 4.5 million Native American people in the United States - just a quarter of the 18 million living when the early European settlers arrived in the 1500s. At the time, Native Americans lived in diverse tribes, each having its traditional practices, religious ceremonies, and complex, often matriarchal, social structures. The early settlers brought with them their predominantly Christian way of living. Over the next three centuries, the settlers launched forceful colonization and cultural assimilation programs in North America. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 led to the forceful eviction of Native Americans from their homelands onto reservations, thus freeing up land for the settlers, continuing the organized occupation and colonization. 

At the same time, the desire to convert or "civilize" the Native Americans according to the Christian faith led to bans on traditional and religious practices; for example, Pow Wows, the Sundance, and the use of the peyote were discouraged or banned. Generations of Native American children were forcibly separated from their families and sent to residential schools to indoctrinate them in Western life. They were often subjected to physical, mental, and sexual abuse at the residential schools.

The attitude towards Native Americans has gradually softened in recent decades. Native Americans were granted US citizenship in the early 1900s, and today, reservations have the status of sovereign nations. Many aspects of Native American tradition have survived over the centuries. And yet the oppression has taken its toll in other ways. The once matriarchal society has given way to women facing an uphill battle against abuse and domestic violence. 

The settlers established systems of oppression to wipe out Native American populations, culture, and languages. Centuries of oppression have resulted in generational trauma leading to high depression, alcoholism, and teenage suicides. 

This project documents the struggle of self-determination and self-preservation of the Native Americans today, after over three centuries of settler colonization.
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