
BY: Caroline Kelly
New Mexico has officially gotten rid of Columbus Day, replacing the holiday with Indigenous People's Day. New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed a bill Tuesday to replace the holiday honoring the Italian explorer with a day celebrating members of the indigenous community, her office confirmed. The holiday will still be a legal public holiday and fall on the second Monday of October.
Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, said in a statement Wednesday that she was "proud" to legalize the new holiday. "This new holiday will mark a celebration of New Mexico's 23 sovereign indigenous nations and the essential place of honor native citizens hold in the fabric of our great state," she said. "Enacting Indigenous People's Day sends an important message of reconciliation and will serve as a reminder of our state's proud native history."
SOURCE: https://edition.cnn.com/
The Columbus Day Committee of Atlantic City along with the Bonnie Blue Foundation annually...
The American Indian Alaska Native Tourism Association (AIANTA) introduced Indian country t...
The debate over turning Columbus Day into Indigenous Peoples’ Day has people riled up on b...
The 2013 Columbus Italian Festival will celebrate and showcase all things Italian during i...
The statue of explorer Christopher Columbus that looms over Astoria Boulevard was vandaliz...
Red paint was splattered across the Christopher Columbus statue in San Antonio's Columbus...
The Joint Civic Committee of Italian Americans (JCCIA) said Mayor Lightfoot and the City o...
With just a month left before Columbus Day, another prominent statue of Christopher Columb...