Comments on the Bishop’s Panel: Transcription of Conference Presentation
“Comments on the Bishop’s Panel: Transcription of Conference Presentation,” an Outcome archive entry by Jake Haiwhagai’i Edwards. The entry belongs to the crosscurrents collection and connects readers to scholarship, public history, and organizing around the Doctrine of Discovery, Christian domination, Indigenous sovereignty, law, religion, land, memory, and accountability.
In brief, it addresses Greetings to you all. I’m Haiwhagai’i, Onondaga Nation, Eel Clan. I have to start off with gratitude for seeing all of your faces here. It is a bit. For readers arriving from the main Doctrine of Discovery site, this post functions as a pointer rather than a replacement for the full Outcome record. The canonical page preserves the complete context, metadata, author information, citation links, media, and neighboring materials in the archive.
The source text highlights terms and contexts including INTRODUCTION The Christian establishments invaded our lands—to this day. We appreciate the work that you guys are mentioning you’re doing, but one drop of rain will spoil that promise on paper—one tear drop will spoil that promise and make it unreadable. So, promises mean nothing, nothing in terms of trust. It’s almost like “put your land in trust of the United States government.” It’s the same hard work when there is no trust. So, in talking about this future to come, we are looking for peace, just as we were in the past when we first met. When we first met the Catholics, the Jesuits,. Read the canonical Outcome page for the complete entry.
Canonical link: https://outcome.doctrineofdiscovery.org/crosscurrents/essay2/comments/
SUGGESTED CITATION
Adam DJ Brett, "Comments on the Bishop's Panel: Transcription of Conference Presentation," Doctrine of Discovery Project (19 June 2025), https://doctrineofdiscovery.org/blog/link/outcome/crosscurrents/essay2/comments/.
Download citation formats:
Share on
X Facebook LinkedIn BlueskyDonate today!
Open Access educational resources cost money to produce. Please join the growing number of people supporting The Doctrine of Discovery so we can sustain this work. Please give today.