 | President Mary Sue Coleman
Native American Land Gift Historical Marker Dedication
Plaza between the Biology and Chemistry Buildings
12noon, Thursday, November 21, 2002
Before beginning my remarks, I would like to acknowledge Andrew Adams, III,
a doctoral student in American Culture and an employee of our Office of Academic
Multicultural Initiatives. For several years, Andrew has been a driving force
in bringing the Native American community's concerns to the fore at the University
of Michigan. And, most recently, he has served as a leader in facilitating
this commemoration and the related seminar and lecture. I would also like to
thank Vice President for Student Affairs Royster Harper and Steven Abbott,
Native American Coordinator in the Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs — both
of whom have been most supportive to these efforts.
To focus fully on the gift
we honor today, I would like to read to you the words of the plaque Regent
White has just dedicated. The plaque, which memorializes
the Native American Land Gift to the University of Michigan in 1817, reads:
" This plaque commemorates the grant of lands from the Ojibwa, Odawa,
and Bodewadimi through the Treaty of Fort Meigs, which states that 'believing
they
may wish
some of their children hereafter educated [they] do grant to the
rector of the Catholic church of St. Anne of Detroit..., and to the corporation
of
the college at Detroit, for the use of the said college, to be retained
or sold,
as the rector and corporation may judge expedient...' The rector
was Gabriel Richard, a founder and first vice president of the corporation
of the
college,
chartered by the territorial legislature as the University of Michigania
in
1817. These lands were eventually sold to the benefit of the University
of Michigan, which was relocated to Ann Arbor in 1837."
While these words
speak to the past, today we are walking together into the future. As we embark
on that walk, the University is reaching out
to our
current student leaders, staff, and faculty to reaffirm and strengthen
our commitment
to Native American students and communities.
We are on the right path
to the enhancement of our Native American faculty and academic programs,
and we have worked hard in student recruitment
and retention. But we can do better, and we will.
Several years ago,
a young woman of the Cheyenne Nation, a former student of mine, taught me
much about, and deepened my own personal
understanding
of,
the dynamics between the Indian and non-Indian worlds. I will always
be grateful to her and remain enriched for having known her. Similarly,
our
diverse academic
community is made more complete, at all levels, by the presence
of those who preceded us and who live, work, and study along side us
today. My
belief in
this truth and my commitment to its fulfillment are unwavering.
|
 |