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The Persistence of Memory

Sunset in the Black Hills

Sunset in the Black Hills

Firstly, I’d like to thank Larry Johnson, and the other outstanding writers here at NQ, for inviting me to be a contributor here.  In a year when waking up became a moral imperative, this community has been a standout force.  I’m honored to be a part of it.

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In his book Cosmos, the late Carl Sagan wrote about whales and their songs. Before the arrival of the steam powered ship, whales could sing to each other across vast expanses of ocean. Songs were learned, exchanged, added to, and perhaps comprise the extensive narrative of their history and knowledge. With the human presence, on and beneath the seas, the distance these songs can travel is drastically limited, cutting them off from communities with which they would exchange information. The cerebral cortex of whales is far larger than ours. There is no telling how far back a whale’s memory reaches. I’m no cetaceans expert, but I would imagine our abilities pale in comparison. Still, there lies within us a thread that connects us to place, time, generations.

The Lakota believe that the earth has a beating heart, and that heart is in the Black Hills, the Paha Sapa, in South Dakota. They believe that the universe has a song. Everything in the universe carries a piece of that song, but the song exists in its entirety in the Paha Sapa. According to their creation story it is from this place that they were born. To them there is no time that this place has not been a part of who they are.

Tenacious warriors, and skilled diplomats, the Lakota transformed themselves from a horseless, agrarian/hunting society into a nomadic horse culture, becoming the dominant nation of the Northern Plains. At the time of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, their territory extended from what is now western Minnesota, south to Nebraska, and west into eastern Montana and Wyoming.

Lakota society was traditionally matrilineal, well ordered, and egalitarian. Within different bands, societies or subcultures were formed. There were societies for warriors, hunters, shamans, security, healers, and so on. There were societies for men and women. But Lakota women were recognized as being endowed with unique power as the nation’s source of life, as reflected in the Legend of the White Buffalo Calf Woman.

After the hunt the women tended to the kill. Everything derived from the bison belonged to the women. The meat, the hides, the bones, organs, every part, and everything made from them was the property of the women. This means the tools, the water bags made from bladders, and most importantly, the clothing, food and tipis, were all controlled by the women.

When it came to matrimony, in many bands it was customary for a potential suitor to sit outside the tipi of the woman he desired. If she wanted him as a husband she invited him inside. If not, too bad. If the couple divorced, the man was homeless as the tipi was not his, a major incentive for being a productive partner and treating one’s wife with respect (in other words, being the equivalent of Al Bundy would be a first class ticket to Coldville). And it was the grandmothers who were consulted as the final arbiters of crucial decisions. Long before American women could vote, Lakota women were central to the power structure in their society. But the American encroachment, presented to us as the notion of Manifest Destiny, broke the circle.

When gold was found in the Montana territory, the trail Americans wished to utilize, the Bozeman Trail, took them through the Powder River region of Wyoming, the heart of western Lakota lands. The Americans proposed building a series of forts along the river to protect prospectors. When the Oglala Lakota, led by Chief Red Cloud, arrived at Fort Laramie to negotiate the treaty, they found that men and materials were in place and the forts were already being built. Realizing that the Americans had already decided their course, and knowing they would not be negotiating in good faith, Red Cloud left the meeting. Four years earlier the Lakota of Minnesota were expelled. Not wanting to suffer the same fate Red Cloud led the people in war against the United States.

Over the next two years Red Cloud utilized a successful strategy against the Powder River forts that led the Americans to call for negotiations to end the hostilities. It was the single greatest victory for an indigenous nation against the United States. In the Treaty of 1868, the United States dismantled the Bozeman trail forts, granted the Lakota all the territory now claimed by the Republic of Lakota and the Lakota Freedom movement, as well as control of the Black Hills in perpetuity. The peace lasted until 1874 when an illegal expedition into the Black Hills, led by George Custer, found gold in them thar hills.

The Lakota went to war again, but were broken by the government sanctioned massacre of the bison herds, and relentless military pursuit. Sitting Bull led the remaining holdouts until 1881 when he and the 186 Lakota with him surrendered. Since then it has been a steady decline. Traditions faded without the bison and access to the Paha Sapa. The matrilineal lines were broken. Children were taken off reservation to be Americanized. Lakota language is rapidly fading. Only 14% of Lakotas are fluent in their language, and most of them are 60 or older. Statistically it will become a dead language in a matter of years. But still they fight to keep their traditional ways alive.

Some of the traditional leaders are advocating a restoration of the matrilineal line, and are building a total immersion school to help their youth retain their language and their culture, before the keepers of their way of life are gone.

Many of us in the human family find themselves struggling; for their rights, for their freedom, for the preservation of their way of life. In this time, in this verse of the song of human history, we are not alone in the notion that essential to that struggle is the empowerment and equality of our women. Traditional Lakota leaders consider the return to matrilinealism a transformative act, one that will lift their society, and renew it. And in many respects, the women have been exercising their power for many years, as lesser known players in the overall women’s rights movement. The most notable example being Women of All Red Nations or WARN. WARN co-founder, and a leader of the Lakota Freedom Movement states,

“What we are about is drawing on our traditions, regaining our strength as women in the ways handed down to us by our grandmothers, and their grandmothers before them. Our creation of an Indian women’s organization is not a criticism or division from our men… [but] a common struggle for the liberation of our people and our land…”

America has a rights based tradition. In fact, the very thesis of our nation is that all people are created equal. But as Elizabeth Cady Stanton pointed out in the Declaration Sentiments in 1848, and Dr. King pointed out 120 years later, America has still not lived up to what it said on paper. We have yet to fulfill our nation’s thesis. Doing so would surely transform us, reshape our society, open doors that have, as yet, remained closed.

To my mind, I see as our new “manifest destiny,” in the shadow of the misogynistic attacks launched at women in both major political parties, as being a coming together of women, and the men who support them, from across the political spectrum, setting aside their ideological differences to engage the Three State Strategy and achieve the ratification of the ERA. The political and societal ramifications are staggering.

Today being the first Native American Heritage Day, I’m thinking about Canupa Gluha Mani, one of the leaders of the Lakota Freedom movement. In an article at Earth First he asked, “Why do you think the rights of humanity are being stripped away? It’s because we are stubborn enough to allow it to happen. We don’t know how to say ‘no’ anymore!” In a year when the woman who inaugurated a new wave in the campaign for women’s rights, by calling for the world to recognize women’s rights as human rights, and human rights as women’s rights, became the most successful female candidate for President in our nation’s history, it seems to be more than a coincidence that the theme of this year’s 16 days against of activism against gender violence is “Human Rights for Women< > Human RIghts for All,” marking the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Clearly there is a stirring in the human Oversoul that is grocking the notion that achieving equality for women is something that will move all humanity forward.

What do you as the women, who in 2008 learned how to say “NO!”, and the men that support them, see as acts, large and small, that will be levers of transformation that will not only help elevate women to the rightful place they should hold, but will lift up our society as a whole, transform it, and bring it to a greater sense of consciousness, moving us toward the fulfillment of our nation’s thesis: the enforcement of universal human rights? What is your piece of the song?

cross-posted at Oh…my valve!

  • http://americanpumainitaly.blogspot.com/ sarainitaly

    Wooo! welcome Shtuey! :OD

  • Shtuey Shtuey

    Thank you, thank you! It was either post here today, or go to the mall and watch people kill each other to get the last Fondle Me Elmo.

  • Ferd Berfle

    Fondle Me Elmo

    ????

    LMAO

  • Ferd Berfle

    What do you as the women, who in 2008 learned how to say “NO!”, and the men that support them, see as acts, large and small, that will be levers of transformation that will not only help elevate women to the rightful place they should hold, but will lift up our society as a whole, transform it, and bring it to a greater sense of consciousness, moving us toward the fulfillment of our nation’s thesis: the enforcement of universal human rights? What is your piece of the song?

    I saw the perseverance of two bold, energetic women during 2008, who, in spite of overhwelmning odds and deplorable treatment on the part of the media, very nearly made it to the very pinncale of political success. These two are, of course, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and Governor Sarah Palin.

  • Bud White

    Welcome, Shtuey! Fascinating post.

  • TexasMirth

    Excellent piece – very thought provoking. I was struck by the division of labor between male & female in the Lakota tradition as well as the quasi-guilds of their society —

    There were societies for warriors, hunters, shamans, security, healers, and so on. There were societies for men and women.

    An egalitarian society, but still gender-based roles…this isn’t exactly applicable to our society, but it sounds like there was a mutual respect between the males & females, which frankly, I think is lacking in America today.
    Wonderful article. Thanks for sharing, Shtuey.

  • HARP

    An old Indian chief sat in his hut on the reservation, smoking a ceremonial pipe and eyeing two US government officials sent to interview him. “Chief Two Eagles,” asked one official, “You have observed the white man for 90 years. You’ve seen his wars and his material wealth. You’ve seen his progress, and the damage he’s done.”

    The chief nodded in agreement. The official continued, “Considering all these events, in your opinion, where did the white man go wrong?”

    The chief stared at the government officials for over a minute and then calmly replied, “When white man found the land, Indians were running it. No taxes, no debt, plenty buffalo, plenty beaver, women did all the work, medicine man free, Indian man spent all day hunting and fishing, all night having sex.”

    Then the chief leaned back and smiled, “Only white man dumb enough to think he could improve system like that.”

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DY3ZEvOfD1w&feature=related

  • pm317

    In the context of ongoing terrorist acts in India and elsewhere and knowing the motives of the perpetrators of such hideous acts and the societies they come from, wouldn’t it have been such a strong counter message for us to send the rest of the world by electing a strong woman leader like Hillary at this point in time and history? Instead half the Dem party and its leaders and the money men behind an unprepared candidate went with the wrong candidate for the wrong times.

  • AdrianS

    From American’s Must Know – http://americamustknow.com/
    11/25/2008

    Cort Wrotnowski’s case from Connecticut is now in the Supreme Court. That’s 3 cases in the Supreme Court Against Barack Obama!

    11/25/08 – AFter another battle with Mr. Bickell, the clerk that has a bad habit of obstructing justice, Cort Wrotnowski, with the help of Leo Donofrio (attorney handling the New Jersey Case), appealed his case from Connecticut to the United States Supreme Court. His case was docketed at 12:38 PM on 11/25/08 and Honorable Associate Justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg will be looking at the case.

    From Atlas Shrugs:
    “Also remember that on December 13, the Electoral College meets to casts its votes. If it has been determined that Mr. Obama is an illegal alien and therefore ineligible to become President of the United States, the Electors will be duty-bound to honor the Constitution.”

    http://www.earthfrisk.com/blog/?p=124

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82qCwLX9piE Woman Voter

    The people of the Six Nations, also known by the French term, Iroquois [1] Confederacy, call themselves the Hau de no sau nee (ho dee noe sho nee) meaning People Building a Long House. Located in the northeastern region of North America, originally the Six Nations was five and included the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas. The sixth nation, the Tuscaroras, migrated into Iroquois country in the early eighteenth century. Together these peoples comprise the oldest living participatory democracy on earth. Their story, and governance truly based on the consent of the governed, contains a great deal of life-promoting intelligence for those of us not familiar with this area of American history. The original United States representative democracy, fashioned by such central authors as Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, drew much inspiration from this confederacy of nations. In our present day, we can benefit immensely, in our quest to establish anew a government truly dedicated to all life’s liberty and happiness much as has been practiced by the Six Nations for over 800 hundred years. [2]

    http://www.ratical.org/many_worlds/6Nations/
    ……………

    Shtuey,

    Welcome, I so enjoy your writings, they truly inspire and cause one to think and more importantly to appreciate.

    There is much wisdom in the past that help us in the future and much to gain from the realization that yes women are ‘full’ human beings and deserving of Human Rights.

    This past year has been a tough one, I am so glad that through it many women stood up and that many men stood with us. The latter was most important as it sends a signal that our society has many good men and that is heart warming.

  • bert

    Very interesting, well written and beautiful post, Shtuey Shtuey. As to your final question, women have to organize and begin to demand respect. We must be willing to point out each and every example of sexism and misogyny in public and private discourse. We need to individually and collectively call out those people who perpetrate sexism. We can no longer be silent. We have to rally and go before Congress and demand our rights. We need to make this issue #1 in the minds of all Americans. We need a new organization to represent us since the ‘old’ organizations were themselves sexist this year.

  • Ferd Berfle

    wouldn’t it have been such a strong counter message for us to send the rest of the world by electing a strong woman leader like Hillary at this point in time and history?

    In short, an emphatic yes.

  • Ani

    Welcome, Shtuey! At last! Amazing post…

    :)

  • Shtuey Shtuey

    I agree with your assertion that new institutions need to be created as women were betrayed by the stand-bys: NOW, NARAL, Emily’s List, etc.

    As for rallying; I think it’s vital to be visible. But we need to remember the lessons of summer 2008: our strategy of emailing, writing, calling, even being in the streets of Denver, didn’t help accomplish our goals. We need to develop a strategy that compels Congress to listen.

    I think part of the equation is not demanding rights, so much as it is exercising them. As I said, we have a rights based tradition. Women have the same inalienable rights as men. Women don’t need to be asking for rights they already possess. They need those in power to stop trying to deny women those rights. Once the ERA is passed, that denying will have to stop.

  • Ani

    Shtuey, I found your post very uplifting, especially in light of my disillusionment at watching the way women have been kicked in the teeth this year.

    It is very difficult to realize what some on this country really think…

  • Shtuey Shtuey

    Thank you Ani. I’m just relieved that finally, people in this country finally stood up and took some action, even if we fell short of accomplishing our short-term goal.

    Now, if Americans stand up over the lastest $800 billion of their money being sucked out of their wallets without their consent, that would really be something. But now that everyone is in a turkey coma I have a feeling we’re gonna let that slide.

    Is it me, or would it cost a lot less to just give everybody $200,000?

  • johninca

    Shtuey, I’m touched by your efforts to help the Lakota. Politicians often talk a great game about helping others, when they’re really seeking power. You’re doing exactly the opposite– helping others without seeking power. May God reward you.

  • csuzeq

    I am afraid of what is to come since the American people would rather risk their country for the sake of freeing their white guilt of choosing the American idol over the competency.

    I am very upset with my country and afraid of the leaders we have chosen. Clinton as SOS makes me feel a little safer, but when she could make a difference and do the right thing, she chose to play politics instead.

    I am afraid to live here, but as an American, I can’t think of any place in the world where we are safe. I feel like I have a big red target on my back!

  • MOmule

    A beautiful post, Shtuey. Your description of the Lakota women’s control over all facets of buffalo products reminded me of the founder of Grameen bank. He said that he gave microloans (some for as little as $5) to women because they could be counted on to work hard and to repay the money. The men would go and drink or fritter it away. I believe that because of this choice 98% of the loans are repaid and the women have built successful businesses. Just $5 to allow a woman to buy material to weave baskets was enough to turn her into a successful businesswoman! We can be sure that here in the US it is still far harder for a woman to float a loan than for her male counterpart.
    Woman Voter – and the first native American to hold a federal office was an Iroquois. Ely Parker (or Donehogawa – Keeper of the Western Door of the Longhouse of the Iroquois), a remarkable man,an officer and friend of US Grant. I think Grant was best man at his wedding.

  • socalannie

    Wonderful article Shtuey! Thanks so much!

  • Deep Truths

    Shtuey! What’s up dude, I was at Bitterpoliticz for a while. Those were days: activism, passion. Glad you’re here at NQ.

  • baby-puppy

    I love today as Native American Heritage Day. That’s beautful. Nice post. Thanks.

  • Steve_in_KC

    This is a very stirring post, Shtuey. From whale songs, to Lakota history, to ratification of the ERA. Quite a journey! :)

    I have nothing to add, but each of these topics touch my heart, and are very familiar to me. I quite enjoyed the read!

  • TeakWoodKite

    test

  • TeakWoodKite

    Shtuey , great job.

  • Ani

    You’ve got a great point there.

  • MBC

    Nice work Shtuey, thanks. Look forward to reading more of your thought provoking, informative and heart warming posts.

  • Justme

    Wonderful post Shtuey I look foward to reading more fronm you here at NQ~~

  • an observer

    I want some of what you’ve been smoking.

  • Shtuey Shtuey

    The Haudenesaunee Confederacy is one of the longest, if not the longest standing participatory democracies on earth. Along with the 50% solution, I am examining their system as I think the one of the best ways for us to preserve our rights, and the democracy of our republic, is for us to have a direct roll in it, with the ability to control our elected officials, instead of them chronically working against our interests.

  • Shtuey Shtuey

    D.T. what’s up! Good to run into you again!

  • Deep Truths

    Hope you keep the activism up. As it is, vetting intelligent stuff is your calling.

    I was Sistah for Hillary at Bitterpoliticz but couldn’t find password for WordPress. Concentrated on getting my certification in billing and coding, it looking great so far.

    I remember the comraderie we had. It is special and it wasn’t in vain. But what a long, strange trip its been. Twelve of the thirteen transition team has Clinton DNA, our girl/woman/Goddess as Sec. of State – wowieee.

    Funny how things turn out, and us PUMA-Hillary Lovers, haven’t changed one bit – yet we are blessed, full of grace, and happy.

    What say you?

  • Shtuey Shtuey

    This year definitely proves that people are awake, and willing to work, a very good sign indeed considering how much work there is still to do.

    Pampers’ embracing of the Clinton administration could spell two things; the most obvious is that he has no clue what he’s doing and he knows it. The other is that he wants these people there to take the fall when his first years are a failure so he can then bring in his leftist dingdongs. I don’t trust the man.

    If HRC does in fact become SoS I will certainly sleep better at night. I’m hoping things ended up this way because she played him. We’ll see. Let’s keep our eyes open and ears to the ground.

    The activism comtinues!

  • Arcadianwind

    Geat post Shtuey! Let us remember this day in history On November 29
    1864 The Sand Creek Massacre occurred in Colorado when a militia, led by Colonel John Chivington, killed at least 400 peaceful Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians who had surrendered and had been given permission to camp.

    Anyone interested in true democracy should read:
    A Basic Call to Consciousness, The Hau de no sau nee Address to the Western World,
    Geneva, Switzerland, Autumn 1977

  • Shtuey Shtuey

    Sand Creek was one of the most egregious acts of genocide committed in the long campaign against north American indigenous people. Thank you for helping readers remember.

    The Call to Consciousness is brilliant. I’ve been thinking about posting it at my blog. Guess this clinches it.

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