| Sunday, January 26, 2003
Commemoration a Chance to Tell Different
Stories
BY FRED TASKER
KNIGHT RIDDER NEWS SERVICE
BLACKFEET RESERVATION, Mont. -- As America nears
the 200th anniversary of the Lewis & Clark Expedition, American
Indian leaders are demanding a major reassessment of how the country
views its heroes and its history.
In the white consciousness, the daring trek rivals that of
Christopher Columbus. The two leaders and their 31-member "Corps of
Discovery" opened up the American West, created a heroic, defining
myth and started to sketch the ultimate shape, the Manifest Destiny
of a fledgling nation.
But to American Indians who had lived on those rivers, plains
and mountains for 10,000 years it was the beginning of something not
far short of holocaust.
Within months settlers were pouring into their native lands
bringing smallpox, scarlet fever and liquor. Within years they were
slaughtering the buffalo, the tribes' chief source of food, clothing
and shelter. Within decades they had decimated Indian populations
and pushed the survivors onto hardscrabble reservations where many
have failed to prosper to this day.
American Indians, who numbered more than 10 million when
European settlers arrived, could count only 250,000 by 1900 --
recovering since to about 2 million.
Revisionist History? "Am- ericans have never been taught
proper history," says Ronald McNeil, great-great-great grandson of
Sioux Chief Sitting Bull and president of Sitting Bull Community
College in Fort Yates, S.D. "We need to use this opportunity to tell
the story of how the land was taken from us, how our culture was
taken, our language -- why we're in the condition we are today."
"It's not revisionist history," says Russell Kipp,
Harvard-trained historian of the Blackfeet Tribe in Montana. "It's
setting the record straight."
Their view resounds among the 54 tribes -- from the Sioux in the
Dakotas to the Blackfeet in Montana to the Chinook on the Pacific
Coast -- that came in contact with Lewis and Clark during their
4,100-mile, 28-month journey from St. Louis to the Pacific and back
in 1804-06.
Still, the tribes recognize that the 35 million visitors
expected on the Lewis & Clark Historical Trail during the three
years of the bicentennial commemoration could be a big boost to
their tourism.
"We can't ignore that kind of economic benefit," says Ben
Sherman, a Lakota Sioux and president of the Western American Indian
Chamber of Commerce in Denver.
It left them in a dilemma: protest the events or profit from
them?
They chose a little of each. Tribal leaders have won prominent
places on the commissions planning bicentennial events and set up
university seminars at which tribal scholars will voice their views.
At the same time they are building replicas of the villages that
Lewis and Clark visited to snag tourist dollars and tell their side
of the story.
The American Indian groups demanded that the National Council of
the Lewis & Clark Bicentennial, the volunteer group coordinating
events, change the bicentennial's official designation from
"celebration" to "commemoration."
Says Sherman: "Jefferson ended up with a policy of Indian
removal, displacement and extermination. How can we celebrate this?"
They won the point.
The council also put together a 30-member Circle of Tribal
Advisers to promote Indian participation in the bicentennial -- both
out of conviction and a desire to avoid the kinds of protests that
met 1992 ceremonies marking the 500th anniversary of Columbus' first
voyage.
Dollars and Sense: That the tribes are fighting for dollars and
understanding can be seen in New Town, N.D. The Three Affiliated
Tribes there -- Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara -- are building an
$11-million cultural heritage center and a replica of the old Mandan
village where Lewis and Clark spent the frigid first winter of their
trip in 1804-05.
When it opens this summer, tourists can stay overnight in an
earthen lodge, among other activities.
And they can listen to folk lectures by Amy Mossett, a
Mandan/Hidatsa storyteller who spent 15 years studying the oral
history of Sacagawea, the 16-year-old Shoshone girl who served as
interpreter for Lewis and Clark. Dressed as Sacagawea, Mossett will
explain that the interpreter never was a Mandan slave, as she is
portrayed in history books.
"No one was ever kidnapped and enslaved in the Hidatsa culture,"
Mossett will tell them. "We went to war and took captives, who
sometimes were absorbed into tribes."
In Browning, Mont., leaders of the Blackfeet Tribe are telling
their side of the story in a total-immersion elementary school,
where students are taught about their heritage in the Blackfeet
language.
They hear how the tribe, which originally inhabited a large area
around Montana, was relocated against its will to this remote
location on the Canadian border. They learn of the 1870 Massacre on
the Marias River, in which U.S. Army troops pursuing murderers
mistakenly attacked an innocent Blackfeet village.
Children in Arthur Westwolf's history class hear two sharply
divergent versions of their tribe's fatal run-in with the Lewis &
Clark Expedition 200 years ago.
From the history books, Westwolf tells them Lewis and one of his
men killed two Blackfeet boys in 1806 because they tried to steal
the explorers' rifles.
Then he invites tribal elders to give their oral history version
-- a much more complicated tale of young boys stealing into an enemy
camp in an ancient ritual that had little to do with thievery and
much to do with courage, honor and coming-of-age.
"According to our oral history, those two boys were doing what
they were supposed to," says Blackfeet spokeswoman Susan Weber. "It
was a way of gaining honor in battle," she says.
Many Misunderstandings: Even after 200 years, tribal leaders are
still angry over the way the journals of Lewis and Clark describe
many of the Indians they met.
Several American Indian leaders will make this point in speeches
at official bicentennial ceremonies Saturday at Monticello, the
Virginia home of President Jefferson, who created the expedition.
Their view -- that the journals prove how little Lewis and Clark
understood the Indians -- is backed up by the late historian Stephen
Ambrose in his 1996 book, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis,
Thomas Jefferson and the Opening of the American West "(Simon &
Schuster, $17 paperback).
In his journal, Lewis says Mandan tribal members eagerly offered
their wives -- "tawny damsels," he calls them -- to the white men
for sex.
Says Sherman, the Lakota Sioux: "There's absolutely no reason to
call it primitive. It's just a different standard. There were no
rigid, puritanical restraints. They were much more enlightened about
sex. There are societies in Europe . . . that are much more liberal
than we are about sex."
Another major goal of the expedition, Ambrose wrote, was to stop
the wars between the various tribes and get them to sign treaties of
peace and friendship, with one another and with Jefferson's
government. The attempt was a failure.
Still, efforts today by American Indian leaders and the white
leaders of the bicentennial to hammer out a working arrangement seem
hopeful.
"We're not vindictive," says Kipp, the Blackfeet historian. "But
we're looking for a renegotiation of reality. The tribes have been
exploited, placed in difficult positions. Today we seek
self-reliance, self-management. We're asking to correct wrongs."
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