Indigenous Philosophy and
Education
Phase Three
Presented to Dr. A. Keith
Carreiro Northern Arizona University
In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for
EDF 670-801, Philosophy of
Education
Maria Cordero Enrique
February 23, 1995
I.          
Table of Contents
II.    
Title of Topic Inquiry........................................... 1
ill. Rationale............................................................. 1
IV.  
Literature Review................................................. 3
V.    
Literature Response............................................. 4
VI.  
Conclusion........................................................ 12
VII.  
Reference-..;; ......................................................... 21
.
II.   Indi£enous Philosophv and Education
The
Xicano Paradi£m KNO\VLEDGE which can
lead to
\VISDOI\1, which will develop STRENGTH, that
we may achieve
HARMONY within and without.
The focus of my
paper will be to examine  the
implications  of  the above 
paradigm  in  terms 
of  contemporary educational  practices.                                                I
will attempt to un earth the
indigenous philosophical roots from which this paradigm emerged. examining the
conflict and contrast with other educational  strategies.                                                    As  an expression  of
 my  own individual
 philosophy of education the paper will
relate research and introspection as a 
process whose goal is the 
enhancement  of  my 
personal  and  professional educational goa ls.
III.  
Rationale
The
theme of multi-cultural education invokes heated debate among advocates and dissenters.                                          On one
hand, the loss of the cohesive and directing force of a culturally monolithic
curriculum based on Western philosophical precepts is seen as a threat to the
security and future of
society.   In anticipation of the population trend which
will create a "white"
, ,
minority within a
national majority of people of color, the thrc t of loss irt psychological
position over the historical "colored" minorities looms
-<
before the heirs to man i fest
desti
ny.   In
contrast, advocates of mul ti-cultural approaches 
to  education  point 
to  the  accelerating 
globalization  processes in
communications and economics as a sign of the end of the era of the culturally
parochial  perspective.  Yet, 
perhaps  both  approaches 
are  not really in opposition.                 The technological revolution
advancing the global economy presents itself as a man i fest destiny for the
technological elite, except that this ti me frontier is not the new world continent , but the entire
globe.         Much of what passes for
multi-cultural education is only the preparation of the workforce with the  necessary 
managerial  skills  to deal with the emerging global
markets.  As  the 
proponents  of  "traditional" western education are
driven by the need
to maintain the dominance of the Europea n-Ame rican model,
multi-culturalism seems to be driven by maintaining competitive prominence in
the global arena for the same European-American interest bloc.
When
my son was in the first grade, he completed a school assignment of the type
wherein three objects are illustrated, and the task is given to identify the
one which does not belong. The three objects in this case were a trumpet, a
drum, and a tree. My son identified the trumpet as being out of place and was
marked  by his teacher as WRONG.                      What this
·           
teacher was unaware
of was that our family, being practitioners of an indigenous M:>":ican traditional form of discipline known as Danza
Azteca, had been recently involved in the process of making a
traditional drum.
The construction of the drum involves many
hours of work preparing and carving a special tree 
trunk.  Drum,  tree, and 
family  represent a continuity of
identity and community that was reflected in my son's mind.
It is the perspective of this continuity that  I 
would  explore  in 
this study.    Yet, at the same time,  part of 
this perspective involves  a
questioning of  the  educational 
process  that  produced 
my son's  first grade teacher.                                         The
skill of recognizing relationships  is certainly  at  the core  of 
building  a body of  personal 
knowledge,  of becoming
educated.        But what is the relationship within the
established educational system between the colonizer and the colonized? \Vill 
indigenous peoples 0      the
only ones to see the value in asking this question?
IV.   Resources Being Studied
A.
Literature Review
Several books selected for review, but
not limited  to, include: God 
is Red
by Vine Deloria. Kccpers of
the  Earth  by  Michael 
J.  Caduto  and Joseph Bruchac, Aztec Thought and  Cultl/re 
by 
Miguel Leon-Portilla, Tales
of a Shaman's Apprentice by Mark J. Plotkin, and Indian Givers by
Jack Weatherford.   Tales of a Shaman's  Apprentice 
is 
an  excellent  source 
on the destruction  of  the 
rain  forest  and it's peoples.                                            Plotkin
spent  several years researching the
native  usage  of 
rain  forest  plants 
and  has  translated his works into a
native language in order that this knowledge is not lost. In
phase two I wi11 out!ine other aspects of his study and how this and other
knowledge  can 
be  used  in our classrooms.   Other related literature to be examined include articles on ecological, environm ental, and
multicultural education.   I am trying to
locate more information on indigenous philosophies around the world specifically
the Americas in  order  to enlighten 
myself  to their  truth, 
value and beauty .                       Several
documentaries are also to be reviewed, specifically one on a tribe in South
America who have sent a message to  the
the outside  world,  or their "
young er brothers " as they refer to us.
V.   Literature Response
In order to examine the Xicano par ad igm, the origin  needs 
to  be expl ored. The Chicano student
movement of the sixties expressed  the
need for the formation of an " int ell ec tual
defense" of the people. This need was expressed in terms of
self-determination as opposed to
assimilation within the U.S. educational system. It was an era which for
the first time descendants of the Mexican people in the Southwest had broken
past the educational barriers to higher ed ucation.
· This generation of Chicanos would organize and unite under
the banner of MEChA (Movimiento Estudiantil 
Chicano de Aztlan).           Invoking
the indigenous ancestral identity of Aztlan (homeland of the Azteca people),
the l\1EChA movement throughout the Southwest emphasized the goal of community
in contrast  to individual empowerment.       The concept was for the university
educated graduates to return to the barrios and pueblos of
Aztlan to put
.,._.
their sk i ll s and education  to,vard the advancement of   the
decolonization of the Mexican people.                                  Simultaneously,
the MEChA  movement  pushed 
for and was successful in implementing courses in Chicano studies in
various universities and colleges.        At
Davis, California a Chicano-Indian university was established and accredited
\vith a curriculum which was based on indigenous
 ident i ty  and  values.
On the occasion of  the 
California  Statewide  MEChA 
conference  in 1994, the
veterans of this  era  gathered 
to reflect  on 
the  history  of  the
student movement they hrld helped to build. These movement veterans, and  other::i  i:'1ey  knew,  had  attained  higher education  becoming
 lawyers, teachers,  administrators  and community
 leaders.                 Yet
along the way something  had  been  lost. something was missing.                                         What   was   
expressed was not feelings or accomplishment but rather feelings
of hurt and betrayal.
\Vhile some had returned to the barrios to
sow  a new generation, the higher
educational  process itself had
overwhelmed a vast majority.           This
vast majority had become assimilated into the competitive corporate culture
wherein an educational degree was a ticket into an  upwardly mobile lifestyle. The assimilation
process accelerated during the Nixon administration  when  the  term  Chicano  was  undermined  by
 th e-gene ric "hispanic"
identification  for all Spanish speaking minorities.                                                       As
one Mechista joked, the Hispanics had gone for the BMW and gave up on the UFW (United Farmworkers Union struggle).      And by accepting the
hispanic definition,
further ground was lost by abandoning the indigenous history of the
Mexican  peoples  in  the
Southwest.  Still  convinced 
that higher education was the right 
path,  the  veterans 
now  questioned themselves  "But 
to what end?"   One movement
veteran having heard this discussion at different times and places questioned
the following of an
educational philosophy that they
described as follows:
EDUCATION \vould open up
ECONOl\1IC OPPORTUNITIES, which would  lead to S UCCESS. v.1h ic
h would then translate to
PO\VER.
From the perspective of the collective history of
exploitation and disempowerment as a peop le, the
goal of achieving economic and political power for the Chicano community was
seen in terms of a common  priority. The priority  remained 
evident  after  twenty 
years.  There  was 
a  sense among the group of a
profound need for a re-evaluation of the context and process of the shared
experiences within the dominant system.
In expressing the
sentiments of the group, the movement veteran 
stated "Would it not better to define our own educational paradigm?
A paradigm which would reflect our ancestral wisdom, upholding the knowledge
that guided  our  people 
for  thousands of years.       Should we consider the formation  of our 
own educational  paradigm?                          (Enrique,  1994)  He   offered the following to be explored in the
creation  of  our 
own  educational paradigm:
. KNOWLEDGE
which can lead to
WISDOM, which will develop STRENGTH, that we
may achieve
HARMONY within and
without."
Harmony is defined as "  rhe 
mechanism  of  give 
and  take so necessary to any
relationship" (Aceves, 1994). In addition, hannony is not free  of conflict, quite the opposite, conflict is
a needed part of hannony in order to reach an understanding and consensus.
Conflict, when seen as a  tool  to achieve harmony allows us to enter
relationships that grow through
co nse nsus rather than se ek to clorninate.    As  I
begin  to explore this
expression of educational philosophy I
will express m,y own philosophical
,...    ... .
values and practices. \Vi thin the bounds of my  topic 
I  will  make connections  to 
the  axiological  concerns of philosopy. What
we value on the surface and what in the end we choose to put a value on are
often in · contradiction. \Vhat can be said of  an educational  system 
at  this  juncture in time which fails to  put 
value on  the preservation  of life on 
this planet? The endangered species list is not limited to plants and
animals but to indigenous peoples around the world who are . in the way  of the bulldozer.· The air upon which
,ve depend for  life  is dangerous 
to  breathe  during various times during the year. These
questions are a part of the axiological concerns of ethics. If we as teachers fail  to address 
the problems  inherent in  the valuing of                                               technological
progress to the exclusion of ecolgical and human values, we  are 
not  neutral,  we  are
"supporting  Lhe ethical  statu
quo"  (Knight,
 1989).              Practical classrooms applications
will be outlined as
well
as research and literature in this area.
Throughout the western hemispere, one  commonality 
that  exists among  indigenous 
people  is how  we  refer to  ourselves.                                               We
call ourselves Mexica,"la raza''. the people. The Delaware called
themselves Lenni .
Lenape or "true  men'';  the Mandan or Numakaki    means "people";
the Comanche or Nemene
means "the people"; and our neighbors the Yavapai or Enyaeva deem  themselves  the "sun people"(Deloria, 1973).                                           Non
Indians were not referred to by color or race but rather by behavior.
Europeans were
re ferred to h
y the  Lakota 
as "washichu"  which  means "the greedy
one \vho takes the fat", meaning that
they  not only  took 
what they thought they needed but rook everything
else (Redhouse, 1979).
The indigenous method of self
identification  relates  an  important
precept of indigenous philosophy which  is
the  belief  in 
the  brotherhood  of all humankind, the two-legged. but not in a heirarchy  over 
the other natural  life  forms. 
The  Lakota  express 
it  as   ,;Ometakuye 
Oyasin",  which translates  as "all 
my  relations''  and  the  Maya 
say "In  lakech",  you  are my
- other me.   Both 
are  expressions  of 
an  underlying  understanding 
rooted in
our
common humanity and shared history which is interwoven with a-ll ,
other living beings. Thus identity is not isolation, but instead seen in
terms of relationship.   And education must proceed accordingly.                                    Is this what Johanson with his "Lucy'' and the Leaky's at Olduvai Gorge are
proving? (Johanson. 1981).     \Ve have arrived at the same conclusion but we have
come
to this understanding and knowledge through different paths.
The relationship of the people  to  the
earth  is another important  concep.t of indigenous  philosophy.                                      The earth
is not regarded in  terms  of  a
commodity  but as a living  being 
with  a spirit.                           We may call her
Tonantzin (Mother Earth) or by another name but the recognition of a
relationship  of origin and destiny  e x ists.  Recently  the
theory  of Gaia  has 
been examined by scientists.
This theory  relates  in scientific 
research  that  the Earth is a living organism with the ability to
maintain a balance, or in other words the Earth like all other living beings is
capable of
self-preservation. Western scientists are coming to believe what indigenous people have known for
countless  generations.                   It is not the content but the process  that 
has  made the difference  in  the
sociological  and  personal 
value  of this knowledge.             A practical implication of this
problem in the classroom is  the
challenge  to engage the student  in 
viewing  the  universe 
in  a  different 
way.  For example. I teach \Vorld History and  Geography, 
and  maps  are  an  integral tool 
in  the  understanding 
of diverse  peoples and cultures.                         One map that I use when
teaching about Mexico is a map 
which  shows  the 
various  tribes that existed in
the 1S00's. The map clearly shows Baja California and the
interior  of Mexico.  but 
what  is different  is the orientation.             Looking at the map on the wall, the tip of Baja
points  to  the 1ight. 
A conventional  map would show the
tip of Baja ,pointing  down  (south), indicating  that 
North is the top direction. This particular map, however, was made in
the Nahuatl
traditional way \vith E,lst. the direction of the
rising sun, at the top. This geographical convention, which  is common 
to  most  indigenous 
peoples,  is a reflection in turn
of the  cultural  and 
scientific  foundation  of 
native peoples cultural  identity.      Indigenous rvrexican teachings  refer 
to humankind as  each  individual 
being  composed  ofa 
flame  of  the the spirit of the sun captured  in  the
earthen 
form. The  map exercise 
is an excavation of the living philosophical values of  indigenous 
cosmology.  In  my experience I have found that stuc!ents have  a  hard  time  with 
this exercise and with maps that !'lip north ancl so uth . Having been exposed to one viewpoint of the v,;orld. the students have been not
educated to
be open to other perspectives.
In an attempt to
explore a pedagogical model based on indigenous philosphy,  the Phoenix Union  High 
School  District  implemented 
a program in the ESL and bilingual Social Studies classrooms called the
Xinachtli  Project in 1991.     Xinachtli is a  Nahuatl 
(Mexican)  word describing the
momentous transformation of a seed 
bursting  open  to 
begin it's life as a plant (Simeon. 1984). The Xinachtli Project has as
it's goal the· reintroduction
of the Nahuatl culture into the community schools  of  the
Xicano Mexicano community  (Enrique,  1991 ). 
The  pedagogy  of  the
project is based on the three traditional Mexica principles of:
Tezcmlipoca -
the aspect of memGi)", history Quetzalcoatl
- the aspect of intelligence, consciousness,
and
Huitzilopochtli
- will.
These are principles of human development  which are the foundation  of  the
indigenous M xican (Azteca) spirituality and cosmology which  have been preserved intact through five
centuries of European colonization through the discipline of the Danza Azteca.
Carlos Aceves. in his book .;The Xinachtli
Project" refers to these principles in the following way: "learning
is a process of creating and not acquiring, children
clo not acquire but create knowledge"
(Ac eves , 1994).
\\'hat is
indicated. and what the Mecha veterans at the California state conference
sensed hacl transpi reel. was that the content of the educationa.:' process  is secondary 
to the process. If the process is
constrained by the cultural 
prejudices  of  500 
years  of European  colonization,     where does the ulitmate
 reality  Iie  for  Indian  people
 unwi11 ing  to surrender  their  humanity
in exchange  for  short 
term.  individual  dividends? 
Especiall  at  this historical juncture. ,vhcn global
tribalism is a growing trend?
VI.  
Conclusion
'
Although indigenous
philosophy is not monolithic, there is a 
basic pattern of expression which repeats and is echoed across the  indigenous cultures. The indigenous cul tu
res are spatially orientated,  and 
view  the world's history as part
of  the 
creation's  history  - 
still  in  progress. 
Part  of this understanding is an
awareness of the cyclical  nature  of 
natural phenomena. It is a philosophy that is rooted in a deep
appreciation for the entire  human
 evolutionary  exp erie nc e,  not  merely
 the  relatively  recent periods  when 
history  ha: been documented.               Based on a precept of appreciation  and
 ethic  of
 res pons ibilit  y as caretakers  of
 the earth , life is   seen as a dynamic, not static. cxrrcssion. The
inflection  of  the 
teachings  of this philosophy attempt
to achieve a sense of 01ientation 
and  well-being  for the learner, the better to participate in
the harmonious development  of  life itself. For want of a better word in the
English  language,  indigenous educational philosophy is
spiritually based.
In the
Americas, this philosophy of the people who have a millenial spiritual and
historical connection to this land has been a problem for the Euro-American  educational
 system.  We as indigenous peoples walk across the land,
realizing the earth below our feet is the dust
of our
ancestors.   How
shall our philosophy guide us when we are confronted by
. ... - 1
curriculum which only
reinforces the supremacist doctrines of "European Discovery"  of the continent?                                                Although
most professional teachers may be
fami Iiar  with  the  ck
bz-tte among  European  cartographers  regarding  the naming
of the New \Vorld. hmv many are familiar with even one indigenous naming of the
continent?
Five hundred years
of ignorance is a long time, but it has not been  long enough to exterminate the \Vi11 and determination
of the indigenous nations to survive and nourish. The  future 
is not what it used  to be.  And the present?                                                    Stripping
mvay cultural rrejudices, the  indigenous
philosophies are just as modern ancl scientific as those philosophies
grounded  in \Vestern  reality 
a11ci of the Christian persuasion.                      As both a teacher within the public school
system and a  traditional  person, 
this duality inn uences me in my profession al, personal and spiritual life.
The Indian dances to bring
rain or sings  songs  to 
make  the  com grow. That these acts me seen ,ls
superstitious  goes 
against  modern scientific
research regarding the theory of the value 
of  sound  vibrations. That Indian people can
communicate ,vi th animals, trees or stones is also seen as supersition.                In his book P/1ysics and Philosophy, James Jeans relates the following:
"Space and time arc
inhabited  by  distinct 
individuals,  but  when 
we pass beyond space :rnci time'. rrorn the world of phenomena towards reality,  individuality 
is  replaced by community.    When we pass beyond space and time. they
[separate individuals] may perhaps form ingredients of a single continuous
stream of life (Deloria, 1972).
In this idea of
nature. a continuous stream of-life, it is conceivable of learning  to hear 
trees  talk  or  to
communicate with animals.                                                 Scientific
research is now beginning to explore the idea of
communication with dolphins and of understanding the songs of the whale.
In 1054, the
appearance of  the Crab  Nebula 
supernova  was recorded by Indians
on the west coast in the form of  a  rock 
paintings  and  inside a cave in California.        These petroglyphs show a bright star  next  to  the
crescent  moon.  The Chinese and
Japanese also
recorded this event which lasting three weeks was visible to
the entire world. The Western world yet failed to record this natural orcler
of the universe because it contradicted
. their  idea  of  an  unchanging  un ive rse.     The  western  medieval  mind  wasn't ready for the Aristotelian idea of truth through observation.
Indigenous
philosophy is based upon observation of nature in all dimensions. It
is an intellectual exercise wherein science and spirituality have 
never  been separated.   My values and practices are rooted in these ancient  philosophical
 thoughts.       Just as modern western man l?oks to the
thinking of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates as being timely today so do I in the
readings and thoughts of the indigenous peoples 
thoughout  time.  The Mexica (Aztec) poet Nczahualcoyotl
related the following:
\Vhat does your mind seek?
\Vhere is your
heart?
If you give
your heart to each and everything, you lead it
nowhere: you destroy your heart.
Can anything be found
on earth? (Leon-Portilla, 1963)
The poet is asking the axiological
question of whether the mind  a.rru
heart can 
discover  real  value 
here on earth.                                                The
poet also states that without a
destination humans lose 
their  heart.  In  Nahuatl,  the  language  of  the
Mexica, yol!orl (heart) is derived 
from  the word ollin (movement),  thus heart is
defined as the "dynamic quality inherent in the human  being" 
(Leon Portilla. 1963). The
last  li ne expresses  the
thought  of  whether 
it is possible to find anything on earth
capable of satisfying the whole dynamic
being  of man. The Mexica understood  the 
problems  involved  in  establishing  values in a changing \vorlcl.
The Mexica also
questioned  their  religious  teachings  of the hereafter as shown in the following poem:
Do flowers go
to the region of the dead?
In the Beyond.
arc we dead or
do we
still live?
\Vhere is the source of the light, since that which gives life hides itself? (Leon-Portilla. 1963)
  
  | 
 
.
learn the importance of our li fe struggle. Nezahualcoyotl
in the following poem expresses the f'v1cxica attempt to discover a foundation,
a true basic principal for man and the universe.
Does man possess any truth?
If not. our song is no longer true. Is anything stable and lasting?
\Vhat reaches its aim?
The Mexica philosopher. whose existence is documented in Fray_ Bernardino de Sahagun ·s General History of New Spain, were the ones who composed the songs
in black and red ink. The Nahautl language employs a linguistic method called "clifrasismo", in which two isolated
qualities of an idea are put together to achieve maximum  clarity 
and precision.               Black  and 
red  ink  is an example 
of a difrasismo.           Black
and red ink  signify  v.1  riti ng  or  wisdom.  In xochirl, ;n cuicatl:   flower and  song means  poetry. 
the  only  truth on earth.       Another
example is in topan, in
mictlan:   what is above us, the 
region  of  the dead. 
This expresses  the idea of the
metaphysical beyond or the unknown 
(Leon-Portilla, 1963).  The Mexica
philosophic thought is not attributed to isolated thinkers, with the exception
of Nezahuacoyotl.  bur  rather  it  is  grounded  in  the  ancient schools
directed by the \vise men .
Indigenous
philosophy holds that all forms of life have their own purpose. There is
strength  in  diversity. 
Shooter,  a Sioux  Indian 
explained this  idea as follows:     " Animals nnd 
plants  are  taught 
by Wakan  Tanka what they are to clo.
\Vakan Tanka teaches the birds to make  nests......All birds, even those or the same srccies. arc not alike,
and it is the same with animals.  or  human  
beings" (Deloria. 1972).                         Existence in creation is the recognition that in
difference there  is strength.  This 
message  is very  timely in today's world in which our
rainforest destruction rate rose 
from  thirty million acres a year
to forty million  in  the 
ten  year  period 
between  1980
and  1996  (Joyce,  1994).  Consider  the  following 
statistics:  of all prescription
drugs one-fourth contain a useful plant ingredient, 121
prescription drugs around the world ar-e mad e from higher
plants--half of
the
plants in these medicines are from the tropics and three-fourths of these
were discovered because they were already used by
indigenous herbalists (Joyce, 1994).
Harvard faculty members were asked by Harvard 
Magazine  to name the world's single most pressing problem. The
response of Edward 0.
Wilson was as fol
lows: "The  worst  thing 
that can  happen--will  happen--is not energy depletion.  economic  collapse,  limited 
nuclear  war,  or 
conquest by  a totalitarian  government.     As terrible as these
catastrophes would be for us, they 
can  be  repaired 
within  a few generations.       The process ongoing in the
1980's that will take millions 
of  years  to conect  is  the 
loss  of  genetic and species diversity by the destruction  of natural 
habitats.  This is  the folly our descendants are least I ikely to forgive
us" (Joyce, 1994). Wilson equates  the destruction
 of  the  tropics  to "bLirning  a Renaissance  painting  to. cook dinner·· (Joyce. 1994 ).
Vine
Deloria states in his book God is Red that our environmental crisis is due to the "rejection of creation as a living ecosystem and
the concept of nature as depraved and an object for
exploitation" (Deloria, 1972).   Indigenous philosophy sees man _and the land as one, with the land
becoming the final resting place of man. We treat the land with respect because
when we walk upon the earth we come in contact
with those who came before us.   Indian
people have a concept of the seven generations.
That means that we must
preserve and take care of the earth for the next seven generations: we borrow the land from the unborn.
How does th is kn ow led ge of i ndi ge nous phi
losoph y
affect my classroom prac
t ices ?    I bring m y va lu es into the classroom when I decide what to teach. what I will emphasize. the viewpoints I wil1
present. The Bering Strait  theory  is one example.   Though
 widely  accepted,  the indigenous peoples
have th ei
r own distinct theory and documentation
regarding the migration pa tt e rns that
h a ve populated the hemisphere.
The Indian
v iew po i n t is a ll o
\vecl expr ess ion in my classroom, not just through read
i ngs , s peakers a n ci ass ig nm e n ts but I how I relate
to m y stud ents , my demea nor.   m y e xp e r ie nces  :rncl my  pe
rsona l reflec
ti ons  of wh at I think is important.
The neglect of th e I nd ian v iewp oint is related in th e following story
by  the 
Sioux  physician Charles
Eastman.  A missionary was
instructing a group of Indians about the truths of his holy relig ion. He recounted the
creation story and the fall of mnn. The Indians listened attentively  and thanked 
him  for his story.   One in turn started to relate the story about
the origin of maize.                 The
disgusted missionary offended by the story told the Indians that his story was
the sacred truth and theirs  was  but fable. 
The Indian replied that they had believed his stories so why would he
not give credit to theirs?
Most of my prescribed
\Vorld History curriculum is 
related  to the history  of Eur ope
.   N on-E ur opean countries
are described and related to in terms of their
relationship to Europe as if they achieved nothing
until they
fonned a relationship with the west. Our textbooks
fail to acknowledge the experience 
of  mankind  as a whole.                                              \Vorld
history is related in terms of "Western
man's conquest of the remainder of the world
and his
subsequent rise 
to  technological  sophistication"  (Deloria, 
1972):  My  goal is to relate to my students the
achievements of  mankind  and to get them  to see a world viewpoint and not just the
western viewpoint of the world.
Stonehenge is a  virtual 
computer  with  its 
usage  and  meaning 
having eluded us: the Aztec cllcnclar
stone is also an ancient computer with its
knowledge  now  just  being
rediscovered.      The debate rages
on  regarding how the ancient
Egyptians  construcreci  the 
most  massive  structures 
on earth. The world is filled with ancient  ruins 
that  will  probably 
still  stand long  after 
the  buildings  downtown 
are in rubble.                                                       We
could not duplicate these structures if \Ve wished to do so. As I write, the newly drafted World
History standards for the  21st  century 
are  being  criticized 
because  too much emphasis is
placecl on multicultui·alism, and too little on the true important  events 
according  to
 Western  tradition.                                 Pat Buchanan in a recent
editorial  questioned  the  importance 
of  students  knowing  
who  Mali's Mansa Musa was.
In 1980. when Edward 0. \Vi Ison made his analysis of the
world's most pressing problem. the species of the Earth were disappearing at an
alarming rate. Four hundred times hster than any time in the recent past.
Species extinctions have been reported by biologists around the world.
Christopher  Joyce  in  his  book
 Earthly  Goods states  it  very
elo·quently
when he writes "We are abandoning  fellow 
living  things  for  a
manufactured dream ,vorld, as ir we could grasp immortality by replacing what is born,
grows, and dies with that which never ages (Joyce, 1994).
In  this present  historical
 context,  v,1 e prepare our  youth
for the challenges to come.   Ecological
crisises have come to be generally accepted as nuisances in the pell
mell advance into the global market, which requires a global extraction  process for raw materials.      From
where comes the raw materials and the labor to sustain the foundation of this
emminently consumptive society?  Are
we to superstitiously believe in the doctrine that technology
will co1-rect itself?
In the indigenous
traditional worldview, there exists a concept of justice.     In
traditional i\1exica teachings, the Sixth Sun which is now dawning is called
the Sun of Justice. Based on the harmonic principle of equilibrium in nature
and the reciprocal nature of 
relationships  which defines our
lives, it is a sun ,,vhose time has come.
VI. References
Aceves, Carlos & J..A. ( 1994 ). The Xinachtli Project- -A Manifesto of Mvthic
Peda 2:o y. ( an u np(1bl ished manuscript).
Caduto. Michael J . & Bruchac. Joseph. (1988). Keepers
of the Earth- Native Ame1ican 
Stories and  Environmental  Activities 
for Children. Fulcrum, Inc. Golden. Colorado.
Deloria, Vine Jr. (1973). God is Red. Grosset & Dunlap, New York, NY Enrique. Tupac. ( 1994). The Xicano Paradi£m. (an
unpublished
communique)
Enrique, 'Tupac. (1991 ). Xinachtli Project. Phoenix Union High School District
publisher.
Johansen, Bruce & :f\1aestas, Roberto. (1979). Wasi 'chu- The Continuing Indian Wars . Monthly Review
Press. New York, NY.
Johanson, Donald C. (1981). Lucv. The Beginning of Humankind . Simon &
Schuster New York. NY.
Joyce. Christopher.  ( 1994). Eanhlv  Goods.  Med icine-Hunting   in  the Rainforest.
Little. Brown & Company. Boston, MA.
Knight, George R. ( 1989). Issues & Alternatives in Educational
Philosophy (2nd edition). Berrien Springs, Michigan: Andrews University
Press.
Leon-Port i Ila. Miguel. (1963).
Aztec
Thought and Culture- A Study of the Ancient 
Nahuatl  ivlind .   University  of Oklahoma 
Press:
Norman, Oklahoma.                                                                          
Plotkin o Mark J. ( 1993). Tales of a
Shaman's Apprentice. Viking Publishers.
New York, NY.
Simeon, Remi. (1984). Diccionario de la Lengua Nahuatl o Mexicana.
Mexico.  OF: Siglo XXI:   America Nuestra.
22
\Veatherford. Jack. ( 1988). Indian Givers- How the Indians of the Americas Transformed the
\r\/orld. Fawcett Columbine, New York, NY.
I.
I
Phase Three
Presented to Dr. A. Keith
Carreiro Northern Arizona University
In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for
EDF 670-801, Philosophy of
Education
Maria Cordero Enrique
February 23, 1995
I.          
Table of Contents
II.    
Title of Topic Inquiry........................................... 1
ill. Rationale............................................................. 1
IV.  
Literature Review................................................. 3
V.    
Literature Response............................................. 4
VI.  
Conclusion........................................................ 12
VII.  
Reference-..;; ......................................................... 21
.
II.   Indi£enous Philosophv and Education
The
Xicano Paradi£m KNO\VLEDGE which can
lead to
\VISDOI\1, which will develop STRENGTH, that
we may achieve
HARMONY within and without.
The focus of my
paper will be to examine  the
implications  of  the above 
paradigm  in  terms 
of  contemporary educational  practices.                                                I
will attempt to un earth the
indigenous philosophical roots from which this paradigm emerged. examining the
conflict and contrast with other educational  strategies.                                                    As  an expression  of
 my  own individual
 philosophy of education the paper will
relate research and introspection as a 
process whose goal is the 
enhancement  of  my 
personal  and  professional educational goa ls.
III.  
Rationale
The
theme of multi-cultural education invokes heated debate among advocates and dissenters.                                          On one
hand, the loss of the cohesive and directing force of a culturally monolithic
curriculum based on Western philosophical precepts is seen as a threat to the
security and future of
society.   In anticipation of the population trend which
will create a "white"
, ,
minority within a
national majority of people of color, the thrc t of loss irt psychological
position over the historical "colored" minorities looms
-<
before the heirs to man i fest
desti
ny.   In
contrast, advocates of mul ti-cultural approaches 
to  education  point 
to  the  accelerating 
globalization  processes in
communications and economics as a sign of the end of the era of the culturally
parochial  perspective.  Yet, 
perhaps  both  approaches 
are  not really in opposition.                 The technological revolution
advancing the global economy presents itself as a man i fest destiny for the
technological elite, except that this ti me frontier is not the new world continent , but the entire
globe.         Much of what passes for
multi-cultural education is only the preparation of the workforce with the  necessary 
managerial  skills  to deal with the emerging global
markets.  As  the 
proponents  of  "traditional" western education are
driven by the need
to maintain the dominance of the Europea n-Ame rican model,
multi-culturalism seems to be driven by maintaining competitive prominence in
the global arena for the same European-American interest bloc.
When
my son was in the first grade, he completed a school assignment of the type
wherein three objects are illustrated, and the task is given to identify the
one which does not belong. The three objects in this case were a trumpet, a
drum, and a tree. My son identified the trumpet as being out of place and was
marked  by his teacher as WRONG.                      What this
·           
teacher was unaware
of was that our family, being practitioners of an indigenous M:>":ican traditional form of discipline known as Danza
Azteca, had been recently involved in the process of making a
traditional drum.
The construction of the drum involves many
hours of work preparing and carving a special tree 
trunk.  Drum,  tree, and 
family  represent a continuity of
identity and community that was reflected in my son's mind.
It is the perspective of this continuity that  I 
would  explore  in 
this study.    Yet, at the same time,  part of 
this perspective involves  a
questioning of  the  educational 
process  that  produced 
my son's  first grade teacher.                                         The
skill of recognizing relationships  is certainly  at  the core  of 
building  a body of  personal 
knowledge,  of becoming
educated.        But what is the relationship within the
established educational system between the colonizer and the colonized? \Vill 
indigenous peoples 0      the
only ones to see the value in asking this question?
IV.   Resources Being Studied
A.
Literature Review
Several books selected for review, but
not limited  to, include: God 
is Red
by Vine Deloria. Kccpers of
the  Earth  by  Michael 
J.  Caduto  and Joseph Bruchac, Aztec Thought and  Cultl/re 
by 
Miguel Leon-Portilla, Tales
of a Shaman's Apprentice by Mark J. Plotkin, and Indian Givers by
Jack Weatherford.   Tales of a Shaman's  Apprentice 
is 
an  excellent  source 
on the destruction  of  the 
rain  forest  and it's peoples.                                            Plotkin
spent  several years researching the
native  usage  of 
rain  forest  plants 
and  has  translated his works into a
native language in order that this knowledge is not lost. In
phase two I wi11 out!ine other aspects of his study and how this and other
knowledge  can 
be  used  in our classrooms.   Other related literature to be examined include articles on ecological, environm ental, and
multicultural education.   I am trying to
locate more information on indigenous philosophies around the world specifically
the Americas in  order  to enlighten 
myself  to their  truth, 
value and beauty .                       Several
documentaries are also to be reviewed, specifically one on a tribe in South
America who have sent a message to  the
the outside  world,  or their "
young er brothers " as they refer to us.
V.   Literature Response
In order to examine the Xicano par ad igm, the origin  needs 
to  be expl ored. The Chicano student
movement of the sixties expressed  the
need for the formation of an " int ell ec tual
defense" of the people. This need was expressed in terms of
self-determination as opposed to
assimilation within the U.S. educational system. It was an era which for
the first time descendants of the Mexican people in the Southwest had broken
past the educational barriers to higher ed ucation.
· This generation of Chicanos would organize and unite under
the banner of MEChA (Movimiento Estudiantil 
Chicano de Aztlan).           Invoking
the indigenous ancestral identity of Aztlan (homeland of the Azteca people),
the l\1EChA movement throughout the Southwest emphasized the goal of community
in contrast  to individual empowerment.       The concept was for the university
educated graduates to return to the barrios and pueblos of
Aztlan to put
.,._.
their sk i ll s and education  to,vard the advancement of   the
decolonization of the Mexican people.                                  Simultaneously,
the MEChA  movement  pushed 
for and was successful in implementing courses in Chicano studies in
various universities and colleges.        At
Davis, California a Chicano-Indian university was established and accredited
\vith a curriculum which was based on indigenous
 ident i ty  and  values.
On the occasion of  the 
California  Statewide  MEChA 
conference  in 1994, the
veterans of this  era  gathered 
to reflect  on 
the  history  of  the
student movement they hrld helped to build. These movement veterans, and  other::i  i:'1ey  knew,  had  attained  higher education  becoming
 lawyers, teachers,  administrators  and community
 leaders.                 Yet
along the way something  had  been  lost. something was missing.                                         What   was   
expressed was not feelings or accomplishment but rather feelings
of hurt and betrayal.
\Vhile some had returned to the barrios to
sow  a new generation, the higher
educational  process itself had
overwhelmed a vast majority.           This
vast majority had become assimilated into the competitive corporate culture
wherein an educational degree was a ticket into an  upwardly mobile lifestyle. The assimilation
process accelerated during the Nixon administration  when  the  term  Chicano  was  undermined  by
 th e-gene ric "hispanic"
identification  for all Spanish speaking minorities.                                                       As
one Mechista joked, the Hispanics had gone for the BMW and gave up on the UFW (United Farmworkers Union struggle).      And by accepting the
hispanic definition,
further ground was lost by abandoning the indigenous history of the
Mexican  peoples  in  the
Southwest.  Still  convinced 
that higher education was the right 
path,  the  veterans 
now  questioned themselves  "But 
to what end?"   One movement
veteran having heard this discussion at different times and places questioned
the following of an
educational philosophy that they
described as follows:
EDUCATION \vould open up
ECONOl\1IC OPPORTUNITIES, which would  lead to S UCCESS. v.1h ic
h would then translate to
PO\VER.
From the perspective of the collective history of
exploitation and disempowerment as a peop le, the
goal of achieving economic and political power for the Chicano community was
seen in terms of a common  priority. The priority  remained 
evident  after  twenty 
years.  There  was 
a  sense among the group of a
profound need for a re-evaluation of the context and process of the shared
experiences within the dominant system.
In expressing the
sentiments of the group, the movement veteran 
stated "Would it not better to define our own educational paradigm?
A paradigm which would reflect our ancestral wisdom, upholding the knowledge
that guided  our  people 
for  thousands of years.       Should we consider the formation  of our 
own educational  paradigm?                          (Enrique,  1994)  He   offered the following to be explored in the
creation  of  our 
own  educational paradigm:
. KNOWLEDGE
which can lead to
WISDOM, which will develop STRENGTH, that we
may achieve
HARMONY within and
without."
Harmony is defined as "  rhe 
mechanism  of  give 
and  take so necessary to any
relationship" (Aceves, 1994). In addition, hannony is not free  of conflict, quite the opposite, conflict is
a needed part of hannony in order to reach an understanding and consensus.
Conflict, when seen as a  tool  to achieve harmony allows us to enter
relationships that grow through
co nse nsus rather than se ek to clorninate.    As  I
begin  to explore this
expression of educational philosophy I
will express m,y own philosophical
,...    ... .
values and practices. \Vi thin the bounds of my  topic 
I  will  make connections  to 
the  axiological  concerns of philosopy. What
we value on the surface and what in the end we choose to put a value on are
often in · contradiction. \Vhat can be said of  an educational  system 
at  this  juncture in time which fails to  put 
value on  the preservation  of life on 
this planet? The endangered species list is not limited to plants and
animals but to indigenous peoples around the world who are . in the way  of the bulldozer.· The air upon which
,ve depend for  life  is dangerous 
to  breathe  during various times during the year. These
questions are a part of the axiological concerns of ethics. If we as teachers fail  to address 
the problems  inherent in  the valuing of                                               technological
progress to the exclusion of ecolgical and human values, we  are 
not  neutral,  we  are
"supporting  Lhe ethical  statu
quo"  (Knight,
 1989).              Practical classrooms applications
will be outlined as
well
as research and literature in this area.
Throughout the western hemispere, one  commonality 
that  exists among  indigenous 
people  is how  we  refer to  ourselves.                                               We
call ourselves Mexica,"la raza''. the people. The Delaware called
themselves Lenni .
Lenape or "true  men'';  the Mandan or Numakaki    means "people";
the Comanche or Nemene
means "the people"; and our neighbors the Yavapai or Enyaeva deem  themselves  the "sun people"(Deloria, 1973).                                           Non
Indians were not referred to by color or race but rather by behavior.
Europeans were
re ferred to h
y the  Lakota 
as "washichu"  which  means "the greedy
one \vho takes the fat", meaning that
they  not only  took 
what they thought they needed but rook everything
else (Redhouse, 1979).
The indigenous method of self
identification  relates  an  important
precept of indigenous philosophy which  is
the  belief  in 
the  brotherhood  of all humankind, the two-legged. but not in a heirarchy  over 
the other natural  life  forms. 
The  Lakota  express 
it  as   ,;Ometakuye 
Oyasin",  which translates  as "all 
my  relations''  and  the  Maya 
say "In  lakech",  you  are my
- other me.   Both 
are  expressions  of 
an  underlying  understanding 
rooted in
our
common humanity and shared history which is interwoven with a-ll ,
other living beings. Thus identity is not isolation, but instead seen in
terms of relationship.   And education must proceed accordingly.                                    Is this what Johanson with his "Lucy'' and the Leaky's at Olduvai Gorge are
proving? (Johanson. 1981).     \Ve have arrived at the same conclusion but we have
come
to this understanding and knowledge through different paths.
The relationship of the people  to  the
earth  is another important  concep.t of indigenous  philosophy.                                      The earth
is not regarded in  terms  of  a
commodity  but as a living  being 
with  a spirit.                           We may call her
Tonantzin (Mother Earth) or by another name but the recognition of a
relationship  of origin and destiny  e x ists.  Recently  the
theory  of Gaia  has 
been examined by scientists.
This theory  relates  in scientific 
research  that  the Earth is a living organism with the ability to
maintain a balance, or in other words the Earth like all other living beings is
capable of
self-preservation. Western scientists are coming to believe what indigenous people have known for
countless  generations.                   It is not the content but the process  that 
has  made the difference  in  the
sociological  and  personal 
value  of this knowledge.             A practical implication of this
problem in the classroom is  the
challenge  to engage the student  in 
viewing  the  universe 
in  a  different 
way.  For example. I teach \Vorld History and  Geography, 
and  maps  are  an  integral tool 
in  the  understanding 
of diverse  peoples and cultures.                         One map that I use when
teaching about Mexico is a map 
which  shows  the 
various  tribes that existed in
the 1S00's. The map clearly shows Baja California and the
interior  of Mexico.  but 
what  is different  is the orientation.             Looking at the map on the wall, the tip of Baja
points  to  the 1ight. 
A conventional  map would show the
tip of Baja ,pointing  down  (south), indicating  that 
North is the top direction. This particular map, however, was made in
the Nahuatl
traditional way \vith E,lst. the direction of the
rising sun, at the top. This geographical convention, which  is common 
to  most  indigenous 
peoples,  is a reflection in turn
of the  cultural  and 
scientific  foundation  of 
native peoples cultural  identity.      Indigenous rvrexican teachings  refer 
to humankind as  each  individual 
being  composed  ofa 
flame  of  the the spirit of the sun captured  in  the
earthen 
form. The  map exercise 
is an excavation of the living philosophical values of  indigenous 
cosmology.  In  my experience I have found that stuc!ents have  a  hard  time  with 
this exercise and with maps that !'lip north ancl so uth . Having been exposed to one viewpoint of the v,;orld. the students have been not
educated to
be open to other perspectives.
In an attempt to
explore a pedagogical model based on indigenous philosphy,  the Phoenix Union  High 
School  District  implemented 
a program in the ESL and bilingual Social Studies classrooms called the
Xinachtli  Project in 1991.     Xinachtli is a  Nahuatl 
(Mexican)  word describing the
momentous transformation of a seed 
bursting  open  to 
begin it's life as a plant (Simeon. 1984). The Xinachtli Project has as
it's goal the· reintroduction
of the Nahuatl culture into the community schools  of  the
Xicano Mexicano community  (Enrique,  1991 ). 
The  pedagogy  of  the
project is based on the three traditional Mexica principles of:
Tezcmlipoca -
the aspect of memGi)", history Quetzalcoatl
- the aspect of intelligence, consciousness,
and
Huitzilopochtli
- will.
These are principles of human development  which are the foundation  of  the
indigenous M xican (Azteca) spirituality and cosmology which  have been preserved intact through five
centuries of European colonization through the discipline of the Danza Azteca.
Carlos Aceves. in his book .;The Xinachtli
Project" refers to these principles in the following way: "learning
is a process of creating and not acquiring, children
clo not acquire but create knowledge"
(Ac eves , 1994).
\\'hat is
indicated. and what the Mecha veterans at the California state conference
sensed hacl transpi reel. was that the content of the educationa.:' process  is secondary 
to the process. If the process is
constrained by the cultural 
prejudices  of  500 
years  of European  colonization,     where does the ulitmate
 reality  Iie  for  Indian  people
 unwi11 ing  to surrender  their  humanity
in exchange  for  short 
term.  individual  dividends? 
Especiall  at  this historical juncture. ,vhcn global
tribalism is a growing trend?
VI.  
Conclusion
'
Although indigenous
philosophy is not monolithic, there is a 
basic pattern of expression which repeats and is echoed across the  indigenous cultures. The indigenous cul tu
res are spatially orientated,  and 
view  the world's history as part
of  the 
creation's  history  - 
still  in  progress. 
Part  of this understanding is an
awareness of the cyclical  nature  of 
natural phenomena. It is a philosophy that is rooted in a deep
appreciation for the entire  human
 evolutionary  exp erie nc e,  not  merely
 the  relatively  recent periods  when 
history  ha: been documented.               Based on a precept of appreciation  and
 ethic  of
 res pons ibilit  y as caretakers  of
 the earth , life is   seen as a dynamic, not static. cxrrcssion. The
inflection  of  the 
teachings  of this philosophy attempt
to achieve a sense of 01ientation 
and  well-being  for the learner, the better to participate in
the harmonious development  of  life itself. For want of a better word in the
English  language,  indigenous educational philosophy is
spiritually based.
In the
Americas, this philosophy of the people who have a millenial spiritual and
historical connection to this land has been a problem for the Euro-American  educational
 system.  We as indigenous peoples walk across the land,
realizing the earth below our feet is the dust
of our
ancestors.   How
shall our philosophy guide us when we are confronted by
. ... - 1
curriculum which only
reinforces the supremacist doctrines of "European Discovery"  of the continent?                                                Although
most professional teachers may be
fami Iiar  with  the  ck
bz-tte among  European  cartographers  regarding  the naming
of the New \Vorld. hmv many are familiar with even one indigenous naming of the
continent?
Five hundred years
of ignorance is a long time, but it has not been  long enough to exterminate the \Vi11 and determination
of the indigenous nations to survive and nourish. The  future 
is not what it used  to be.  And the present?                                                    Stripping
mvay cultural rrejudices, the  indigenous
philosophies are just as modern ancl scientific as those philosophies
grounded  in \Vestern  reality 
a11ci of the Christian persuasion.                      As both a teacher within the public school
system and a  traditional  person, 
this duality inn uences me in my profession al, personal and spiritual life.
The Indian dances to bring
rain or sings  songs  to 
make  the  com grow. That these acts me seen ,ls
superstitious  goes 
against  modern scientific
research regarding the theory of the value 
of  sound  vibrations. That Indian people can
communicate ,vi th animals, trees or stones is also seen as supersition.                In his book P/1ysics and Philosophy, James Jeans relates the following:
"Space and time arc
inhabited  by  distinct 
individuals,  but  when 
we pass beyond space :rnci time'. rrorn the world of phenomena towards reality,  individuality 
is  replaced by community.    When we pass beyond space and time. they
[separate individuals] may perhaps form ingredients of a single continuous
stream of life (Deloria, 1972).
In this idea of
nature. a continuous stream of-life, it is conceivable of learning  to hear 
trees  talk  or  to
communicate with animals.                                                 Scientific
research is now beginning to explore the idea of
communication with dolphins and of understanding the songs of the whale.
In 1054, the
appearance of  the Crab  Nebula 
supernova  was recorded by Indians
on the west coast in the form of  a  rock 
paintings  and  inside a cave in California.        These petroglyphs show a bright star  next  to  the
crescent  moon.  The Chinese and
Japanese also
recorded this event which lasting three weeks was visible to
the entire world. The Western world yet failed to record this natural orcler
of the universe because it contradicted
. their  idea  of  an  unchanging  un ive rse.     The  western  medieval  mind  wasn't ready for the Aristotelian idea of truth through observation.
Indigenous
philosophy is based upon observation of nature in all dimensions. It
is an intellectual exercise wherein science and spirituality have 
never  been separated.   My values and practices are rooted in these ancient  philosophical
 thoughts.       Just as modern western man l?oks to the
thinking of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates as being timely today so do I in the
readings and thoughts of the indigenous peoples 
thoughout  time.  The Mexica (Aztec) poet Nczahualcoyotl
related the following:
\Vhat does your mind seek?
\Vhere is your
heart?
If you give
your heart to each and everything, you lead it
nowhere: you destroy your heart.
Can anything be found
on earth? (Leon-Portilla, 1963)
The poet is asking the axiological
question of whether the mind  a.rru
heart can 
discover  real  value 
here on earth.                                                The
poet also states that without a
destination humans lose 
their  heart.  In  Nahuatl,  the  language  of  the
Mexica, yol!orl (heart) is derived 
from  the word ollin (movement),  thus heart is
defined as the "dynamic quality inherent in the human  being" 
(Leon Portilla. 1963). The
last  li ne expresses  the
thought  of  whether 
it is possible to find anything on earth
capable of satisfying the whole dynamic
being  of man. The Mexica understood  the 
problems  involved  in  establishing  values in a changing \vorlcl.
The Mexica also
questioned  their  religious  teachings  of the hereafter as shown in the following poem:
Do flowers go
to the region of the dead?
In the Beyond.
arc we dead or
do we
still live?
\Vhere is the source of the light, since that which gives life hides itself? (Leon-Portilla. 1963)
  
  | 
 
.
learn the importance of our li fe struggle. Nezahualcoyotl
in the following poem expresses the f'v1cxica attempt to discover a foundation,
a true basic principal for man and the universe.
Does man possess any truth?
If not. our song is no longer true. Is anything stable and lasting?
\Vhat reaches its aim?
The Mexica philosopher. whose existence is documented in Fray_ Bernardino de Sahagun ·s General History of New Spain, were the ones who composed the songs
in black and red ink. The Nahautl language employs a linguistic method called "clifrasismo", in which two isolated
qualities of an idea are put together to achieve maximum  clarity 
and precision.               Black  and 
red  ink  is an example 
of a difrasismo.           Black
and red ink  signify  v.1  riti ng  or  wisdom.  In xochirl, ;n cuicatl:   flower and  song means  poetry. 
the  only  truth on earth.       Another
example is in topan, in
mictlan:   what is above us, the 
region  of  the dead. 
This expresses  the idea of the
metaphysical beyond or the unknown 
(Leon-Portilla, 1963).  The Mexica
philosophic thought is not attributed to isolated thinkers, with the exception
of Nezahuacoyotl.  bur  rather  it  is  grounded  in  the  ancient schools
directed by the \vise men .
Indigenous
philosophy holds that all forms of life have their own purpose. There is
strength  in  diversity. 
Shooter,  a Sioux  Indian 
explained this  idea as follows:     " Animals nnd 
plants  are  taught 
by Wakan  Tanka what they are to clo.
\Vakan Tanka teaches the birds to make  nests......All birds, even those or the same srccies. arc not alike,
and it is the same with animals.  or  human  
beings" (Deloria. 1972).                         Existence in creation is the recognition that in
difference there  is strength.  This 
message  is very  timely in today's world in which our
rainforest destruction rate rose 
from  thirty million acres a year
to forty million  in  the 
ten  year  period 
between  1980
and  1996  (Joyce,  1994).  Consider  the  following 
statistics:  of all prescription
drugs one-fourth contain a useful plant ingredient, 121
prescription drugs around the world ar-e mad e from higher
plants--half of
the
plants in these medicines are from the tropics and three-fourths of these
were discovered because they were already used by
indigenous herbalists (Joyce, 1994).
Harvard faculty members were asked by Harvard 
Magazine  to name the world's single most pressing problem. The
response of Edward 0.
Wilson was as fol
lows: "The  worst  thing 
that can  happen--will  happen--is not energy depletion.  economic  collapse,  limited 
nuclear  war,  or 
conquest by  a totalitarian  government.     As terrible as these
catastrophes would be for us, they 
can  be  repaired 
within  a few generations.       The process ongoing in the
1980's that will take millions 
of  years  to conect  is  the 
loss  of  genetic and species diversity by the destruction  of natural 
habitats.  This is  the folly our descendants are least I ikely to forgive
us" (Joyce, 1994). Wilson equates  the destruction
 of  the  tropics  to "bLirning  a Renaissance  painting  to. cook dinner·· (Joyce. 1994 ).
Vine
Deloria states in his book God is Red that our environmental crisis is due to the "rejection of creation as a living ecosystem and
the concept of nature as depraved and an object for
exploitation" (Deloria, 1972).   Indigenous philosophy sees man _and the land as one, with the land
becoming the final resting place of man. We treat the land with respect because
when we walk upon the earth we come in contact
with those who came before us.   Indian
people have a concept of the seven generations.
That means that we must
preserve and take care of the earth for the next seven generations: we borrow the land from the unborn.
How does th is kn ow led ge of i ndi ge nous phi
losoph y
affect my classroom prac
t ices ?    I bring m y va lu es into the classroom when I decide what to teach. what I will emphasize. the viewpoints I wil1
present. The Bering Strait  theory  is one example.   Though
 widely  accepted,  the indigenous peoples
have th ei
r own distinct theory and documentation
regarding the migration pa tt e rns that
h a ve populated the hemisphere.
The Indian
v iew po i n t is a ll o
\vecl expr ess ion in my classroom, not just through read
i ngs , s peakers a n ci ass ig nm e n ts but I how I relate
to m y stud ents , my demea nor.   m y e xp e r ie nces  :rncl my  pe
rsona l reflec
ti ons  of wh at I think is important.
The neglect of th e I nd ian v iewp oint is related in th e following story
by  the 
Sioux  physician Charles
Eastman.  A missionary was
instructing a group of Indians about the truths of his holy relig ion. He recounted the
creation story and the fall of mnn. The Indians listened attentively  and thanked 
him  for his story.   One in turn started to relate the story about
the origin of maize.                 The
disgusted missionary offended by the story told the Indians that his story was
the sacred truth and theirs  was  but fable. 
The Indian replied that they had believed his stories so why would he
not give credit to theirs?
Most of my prescribed
\Vorld History curriculum is 
related  to the history  of Eur ope
.   N on-E ur opean countries
are described and related to in terms of their
relationship to Europe as if they achieved nothing
until they
fonned a relationship with the west. Our textbooks
fail to acknowledge the experience 
of  mankind  as a whole.                                              \Vorld
history is related in terms of "Western
man's conquest of the remainder of the world
and his
subsequent rise 
to  technological  sophistication"  (Deloria, 
1972):  My  goal is to relate to my students the
achievements of  mankind  and to get them  to see a world viewpoint and not just the
western viewpoint of the world.
Stonehenge is a  virtual 
computer  with  its 
usage  and  meaning 
having eluded us: the Aztec cllcnclar
stone is also an ancient computer with its
knowledge  now  just  being
rediscovered.      The debate rages
on  regarding how the ancient
Egyptians  construcreci  the 
most  massive  structures 
on earth. The world is filled with ancient  ruins 
that  will  probably 
still  stand long  after 
the  buildings  downtown 
are in rubble.                                                       We
could not duplicate these structures if \Ve wished to do so. As I write, the newly drafted World
History standards for the  21st  century 
are  being  criticized 
because  too much emphasis is
placecl on multicultui·alism, and too little on the true important  events 
according  to
 Western  tradition.                                 Pat Buchanan in a recent
editorial  questioned  the  importance 
of  students  knowing  
who  Mali's Mansa Musa was.
In 1980. when Edward 0. \Vi Ison made his analysis of the
world's most pressing problem. the species of the Earth were disappearing at an
alarming rate. Four hundred times hster than any time in the recent past.
Species extinctions have been reported by biologists around the world.
Christopher  Joyce  in  his  book
 Earthly  Goods states  it  very
elo·quently
when he writes "We are abandoning  fellow 
living  things  for  a
manufactured dream ,vorld, as ir we could grasp immortality by replacing what is born,
grows, and dies with that which never ages (Joyce, 1994).
In  this present  historical
 context,  v,1 e prepare our  youth
for the challenges to come.   Ecological
crisises have come to be generally accepted as nuisances in the pell
mell advance into the global market, which requires a global extraction  process for raw materials.      From
where comes the raw materials and the labor to sustain the foundation of this
emminently consumptive society?  Are
we to superstitiously believe in the doctrine that technology
will co1-rect itself?
In the indigenous
traditional worldview, there exists a concept of justice.     In
traditional i\1exica teachings, the Sixth Sun which is now dawning is called
the Sun of Justice. Based on the harmonic principle of equilibrium in nature
and the reciprocal nature of 
relationships  which defines our
lives, it is a sun ,,vhose time has come.
VI. References
Aceves, Carlos & J..A. ( 1994 ). The Xinachtli Project- -A Manifesto of Mvthic
Peda 2:o y. ( an u np(1bl ished manuscript).
Caduto. Michael J . & Bruchac. Joseph. (1988). Keepers
of the Earth- Native Ame1ican 
Stories and  Environmental  Activities 
for Children. Fulcrum, Inc. Golden. Colorado.
Deloria, Vine Jr. (1973). God is Red. Grosset & Dunlap, New York, NY Enrique. Tupac. ( 1994). The Xicano Paradi£m. (an
unpublished
communique)
Enrique, 'Tupac. (1991 ). Xinachtli Project. Phoenix Union High School District
publisher.
Johansen, Bruce & :f\1aestas, Roberto. (1979). Wasi 'chu- The Continuing Indian Wars . Monthly Review
Press. New York, NY.
Johanson, Donald C. (1981). Lucv. The Beginning of Humankind . Simon &
Schuster New York. NY.
Joyce. Christopher.  ( 1994). Eanhlv  Goods.  Med icine-Hunting   in  the Rainforest.
Little. Brown & Company. Boston, MA.
Knight, George R. ( 1989). Issues & Alternatives in Educational
Philosophy (2nd edition). Berrien Springs, Michigan: Andrews University
Press.
Leon-Port i Ila. Miguel. (1963).
Aztec
Thought and Culture- A Study of the Ancient 
Nahuatl  ivlind .   University  of Oklahoma 
Press:
Norman, Oklahoma.                                                                          
Plotkin o Mark J. ( 1993). Tales of a
Shaman's Apprentice. Viking Publishers.
New York, NY.
Simeon, Remi. (1984). Diccionario de la Lengua Nahuatl o Mexicana.
Mexico.  OF: Siglo XXI:   America Nuestra.
22
\Veatherford. Jack. ( 1988). Indian Givers- How the Indians of the Americas Transformed the
\r\/orld. Fawcett Columbine, New York, NY.
I.
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