MY BRIGHT SPOT: CELEBRATING DIVERSE CULTURES
Virginia boasts a diverse tapestry of cultures that deserve to be celebrated. Last week, I celebrated the contributions of Hispanic, African and Nottoway culture.
Long before explorers landed on the shores of the North American continent, several distinct groups of Iroquoian-speaking people lived in the Virginia-North Carolina coastal plain. The Nottoway lived along the Nottoway River in parts of the present day counties of Southampton, Nottoway, Dinwiddie, Sussex, Surry and Isle of Wight. As colonists began expanding into Nottoway land, the Treaty of Middle Plantation in 1677 and the Spotswood Treaty with the Nottoway in 1713-1714 established a relationship between the Virginia colony and several Tribes, including the Nottoway. The Commonwealth of Virginia granted official state recognition of the Nottoway Indian Tribe in 2010.
Over the weekend, the Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia held its annual Pow Wow in Surry to celebrate its history and culture. I joined the Grand Entry ceremony to announce legislation I filed to grant federal recognition to the Tribe as a sovereign nation.
September 15th kicked off Hispanic Heritage Month, honoring the past while looking forward to build community and celebrate the diverse cultures and traditions of all Spanish-speaking people. In 1565, Spanish explorer Pedro Menéndez de Avilés founded the first permanent Spanish settlement in what is now the United States. For the past 460 years, Hispanic heritage has continued to influence and inspire American culture, even when those stories often went untold. I’m eager to continue sharing those stories as we continue through Hispanic Heritage Month.
From the first Africans kidnapped from their homes and brought involuntarily to America to the African immigrants who arrived to pursue the American dream, the African Diaspora has profoundly influenced the American culture, economy and communities. As a state legislator, I led efforts that made Virginia the first state in the country to recognize September as African Diaspora Month. Last Tuesday, I attended African Diaspora Heritage Day on the Hill to announce my federal legislation designating September as African Diaspora Heritage Month.
|