Unsettling Mormonism
an archive of unsettling histories, mythistories, and mystories
from U.S. & Mormon settler colonialism, white supremacy, and imperialism
from U.S. & Mormon settler colonialism, white supremacy, and imperialism
This is my great-great-great grandpa, John. As a 6-yr-old he emigrated from Scotland by ship.
As a 9-yr-old, he migrated by wagon w/ his family thru the lands of Očhéthi Šakówiŋ, Omaha, Pâri (Pawnee), Cheyenne, Sicangu, Oglala, Arapaho, Eastern Shoshone, Apsaalooké (Crow), Bah-Kho-Je (Ioway), & Shonshone-Bannock, on the so-called “Mormon Pioneer Trail.” As a 12-yr-old he was baptized in Nuwu waters & grew up in “the old fort” designed to protect his family from the Peoples whose homes/lands they were stealing. As a 15-yr-old, he & his father, as part of the Iron County Mormon Militia, likely dressed in red-face & participated in the Mountain Meadows Massacre. As a young man he was “a hardy frontiersman & Indian fighter.” He lived in an adobe house, worked on the railroad, & helped build the St. George & Manti temples, & the Deseret fort. Mostly, he was a “farmer & stockraiser,” contributing directly to the theft of arigable Indigenous lands & waters, & the desertification of Nuwu lands thru the introduction of invasive European cattle & grasses. He actively made it harder for Indigenous ppl to feed themselves so that he could feed his own in the ways he’d imported from Europe. “He was a leading citizen.” As a 24-yr-old he “acted as a captain [of the Iron County Militia of the Nauvoo Legion] & rendered efficient aid in the Black Hawk war,” During this crusade, the Church fought to steal land. The Shoshone-Bannock, Timanogos, Shoshone, Goshute, Diné & Nuwu fought to save their people, lands, & lifeways. This militarized predation slowed as Gov. Brigham Young declared it “cheaper to feed the Indians than fight them”––shifting to a policy of assimilation rather than elimination. I say all this to illustrate: there is no innocent settler. As none of us are innocent today. He did not choose to emigrate to these lands, but he chose to be a settler. He did not choose to have one of his first homes in this land be a fort, but he chose to be captain in a genocidal war. I often wonder what my ancestors think of the work I do. Do they regret the ways they chose to live & believe? Are they w/ me as I work to unsettle what they settled?
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AuthorI am nicholas b jacobsen, an artist, researcher, historian, educator, and organizer. I am a trans-non binary Euro-settler raised in the Nuwu lands of so-called Utah. My family has been Mormon and Utahn for as long as either of those concepts have existed. My ancestors sacrificed everything--their identities, homelands, jobs, health, & safety to become Mormon, Utahn, U.S. American, & white--to settler their Zion. They also sacrificed their humanities as they committed genocide against Kuttuhsippeh (Goshute), Timpanogos Shoshone, Shoshone-Bannock, Eastern Shoshone, Ute, Nuwu (Southern Paiute), and Diné (Navajo). Because my ancestors made my home through Indigenous genocide in their home/lands––I take it as my personal responsibility to unsettle what my ancestors settled, while helping my fellow settlers do the same through reading, writing, art, and community building. Archives
June 2023
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