"Offers a much-needed, well-documented, and appropriately scathing critique of Catholic missions and their participation in the cultural genocide of Native Californian people. This is a valuable contribution to Indigenous history and Indigenous religious studies, painting a powerful portrait of political and religious colonial history as well as contemporary California Indian cultural and spiritual retrieval."
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Suzanne Crawford O'Brien, author of Religion and Culture in Native America
"Focusing on the region currently called California, Sepulveda examines the ghosts of missionization, colonization and dispossession – the “afterlife” of violation. No longer shrouded with misnomers like “progress” or “religious conversion,” he calls out their true name: genocide, enacted with unimaginable cruelty by Spanish priests and soldiers in the name of spiritual and physical possession. Sepulveda points out that while resistance, survival and empowerment run like a thread through California Indian history, it has come with a price: whatever empowerment we gain, we cannot walk away as if unscathed by such a history, but must carry it with us, acknowledging what has been irreparably lost, and what must be reinvented. To ignore it is to ignore the crime that was colonization, and which continues to be committed against our sovereignty. This is a wise and sobering project."
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Deborah A. Miranda, author of Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir