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Tim Giago

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December 29, 'A Day That Will Live in Infamy' for the Lakota

Posted: 12/28/11 03:25 PM ET

Most white South Dakotans forget that in December of 1890 there were still violent hostilities that existed between the Lakota and the United States. To this day an all-inclusive peace treaty has never been signed between the tribes of the Great Sioux Nation and the United States government.

On December 15, 1890 Tatanka Iyotanka (Sitting Bull) was shot to death by tribal police officers Red Tomahawk and Bull Head. Many of his followers fled to seek refuge with his half-brother, Si Tanka (Big Foot). Because Big Foot had been affiliated with the new religious formation known as the Ghost Dance, and fearing arrest and reprisals, Big Foot set out for Pine Ridge after an invitation from Chief Red Cloud to join him there and assist him in finding a path to peace.

Big Foot's followers numbered around 300 and fled to Pine Ridge under a white flag of peace. They had no intention of fighting and in fact their intentions were just the opposite; all they wanted was to find a place of peace.

On December 28 they were intercepted by the 7th Cavalry, the same branch of the U. S. Army that was headed by George Armstrong Custer in 1876 at the Little Bighorn. Big Foot's band was pushed to make an encampment at Wounded Knee creek. They were stripped of their weapons.

The next morning, December 29, while forced to line up for further searches a weapon discharged and the massacre at Wounded Knee began. Without weapons, the Lakota warriors shouted to the women and children to flee and they fought the soldiers with their bare hands.

Big Foot was shot to death while lying in his tent suffering from pneumonia.

Two weeks before the massacre after hearing of the death of Sitting Bull, a newspaperman named L. Frank Baum, the same man who wrote The Wonderful Wizard of Oz a few years later, editorialized in the Aberdeen (S.D.) Saturday Review, "Sitting Bull, most renowned Sioux of modern history, is dead. He was an Indian with a white man's spirit of hatred and revenge for those who wronged him and his. With this fall the nobility of the Redskin is extinguished and what few are left are a pack of whining curs who lick the hand that smites them. The Whites, by law of conquest, by justice of civilization, are masters of the American continent, and the best safety of the frontier settlers will be secured by the total annihilation of the few remaining Indians."

My grandmother Sophie was an employee at the Holy Rosary Indian Mission, just a few miles from Wounded Knee, and told of the soldiers that rode on to the mission grounds on that freezing day in December, some with blood still on their gloves, and about how she and several of the students had to feed and water their horses.

American Horse, a prominent Lakota leader said, "There was a woman with an infant in her arms who was killed as she almost touched the flag of truce . . . A mother was shot down with her infant; the child not knowing its mother was dead, was still nursing. The women as they were fleeing with their babies were killed together, shot right through and after most all of them had been killed a cry was made that all those who were not killed or wounded should come forth and they would be safe. Little boys came out of their places of refuge, and as soon as they came in sight a number of soldiers surrounded them and butchered them."

More than 20 Medals of Honor were given to the soldiers involved in this pitiless massacre. To the Lakota people, even to this day, December 29, 1890 is a "Day that will live in infamy."

To the Lakota it will never be ancient history, but a day they will tell their children about and their children will tell it to their children. My grandmother was there and remembered that day and as a Lakota woman, she and all of our relatives were marked for annihilation by the newspaper man L. Frank Baum. He called for the genocide of the Lakota people and no one, except the Lakota people, saw any wrong in this.

I heard a television newsman say just last week that the shooting at Virginia Tech where 33 students were killed, was the largest mass shooting in American history. Numbers vary on the Massacre at Wounded Knee, but nearly 300 would not be far from reality. And then there were the massacres at Sand Creek and Washita, to name a few more where American Indian men, women and children were shot to death.

America has never made reparations nor apologized for this Day of Infamy.

 

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07:15 PM on 01/04/2012
Armed white men killed defenseles­s native Americans. So what else is new?
07:57 PM on 01/03/2012
The US Army issued 20 Medals of Honor to soldiers for their actions at Wounded Knee. The Medal of Honor is for actions "above and beyond the call of duty". I think the government needs to take a look at recinding those medals.
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BlairCase
05:24 PM on 01/04/2012
Medals of Honor were awarded during the Civil War and Indian Wars for actions that wouldn't merit a Bronze Star today. There were 1,522 awarded in the Civil War and 426 awarded during the Indian Wars. This compares to 124 during World War I and 464 during World War II.Today, the criteria is much stiffer than in earlier days.
07:28 PM on 01/02/2012
Yes, 12/29/?? was a day of infamy. The whole massacre could have been prevented if there wasn't so much anamosity toward the Am. Indian. If it were not for the Indian the white man who arrived in the 1600's would never survivied. My husband's people always denied their rights and now when they fight for their soverine land the Indian is still the low man on the totem pole. Not fair to a great people . The american africans fair a little bettter than the Am.Indian.
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BlairCase
05:31 PM on 01/04/2012
The Pilgrims at Plymouth Colony may not have survived, but the much better organized and better financed Massachuse­tts Bay Colony flourished from the beginning. Besides, the Spanish establishe­d Sante Fe in 1598.
04:21 AM on 01/01/2012
"From sea to shining sea" a land literally stolen from it's inhabitant­s, built on the sweat of Black people, mortared with the blood of the Natives. I've always found it "interesti­ng" that Whites will claim Indian blood, but this at the same time is a group of people that was "marked" for exterminat­ion with "extreme prejudice" in whole swaths of this country. My people only know this country, as we were "sold" from ours, but i have often thought it must really hurt to be Native American or Hawaiian to see the land that was once yours in the hands of others.
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BlairCase
10:38 AM on 12/30/2011
Far from forgotten, the Wounded Knee Massacre is one of the most publicized events in U.S. history. It's been the subject of many books, novels, movies and documentar­ies. Some estimates do place the number of Lakota Sioux killed at Wounded Knee as high as 300, but the generally accepted estimate is about 150 men, women, and children killed and 51 wounded. Some of the Lakota warriors may have fought with their bare hands, but others were armed with rifles. (The fight started as the cavalrymen began disarming the warriors.) Twenty-fiv­e cavalry troopers died, and 39 were wounded. Six of the wounded troopers later died of their wounds.
08:55 PM on 12/29/2011
this is very sad to read. over the years i heard stories, but did not realize how bad the native indians were treated. it seems our government is continuing their annilation­s but in other countries, disarming the people ,leaves them open for killing, murder. so far we are stilll fighting to keep this from coming to america again. so sorry for all their grief and pain!
12:16 PM on 12/29/2011
This was a sad day for humanity, one of many. Let us hope that our humanity towards others has grown since then and continues to grow. We will reach the point when our bonds of love for our planet and fellow human will be forged from the heat of past hatreds, and when the flames no longer trouble us those bonds will grow strong.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
07:08 PM on 12/28/2011
from the very first treaty. none have ever been honored by the white man !!!!!!!!..­.the whites invaded with the thought of Manifest Destiny...­there were many ways that the christians converted the Indigenous Peoples...­one was by butchering the babies in front of the baby's parents...­and then the remains were handed back to the parents !!!!!!

the Lakota were the last Nation to be forced from their land...and one of the methods used was to annihilate the buffalo...­which the whites did eagerly !!!!!!!...­all of the Care-Taker­s/Care Givers (natives with Traditiona­l Beliefs) have been pretty much wiped out, and christiani­ty has taken over however, our Traditiona­l believers are coming back to our Old Ways !!!!!
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07:39 PM on 12/28/2011
Oh, Kola, I know the history but it still makes my heart hurt!

Yes, the Old Ways remain with us and have survived to teach new generation­s (thanks to many brave men and women who have kept them alive!) . Still ... the People endure!
Mitakuye Oaysin!
07:33 PM on 01/02/2012
Kola. I agree with you. We must try to balance our life with harmony ,thus we may walk in beauty. wakan Tanka kici un.
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thinkingwomanmillstone
Corporations are NOT people, my friend.
04:28 PM on 12/28/2011
It is a blot on the history of the United States that these massacres happened. When historians speak of genocide, they leave out what was done to Native Americans. So little attention is spent to actually teaching the true history of the US...the good along with the bad...thos­e who sacrificed willingly and those who were unwillingl­y sacrificed­.