Posted Sunday, June 30, 2002; 8:31
a.m. EST
Prairie grass ripples along the shores of North Dakota's Lake Sakakawea, and
a fat rainbow shimmers overhead. Here, if Amy Mossett has her way, an $11
million interactive museum will soon welcome visitors to the Lewis and Clark
trail. Mossett, tourism director for the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara tribes,
is building replica earth lodges and planning overnight sleep-in-a-teepee
packages with Indian food, ethno-botany hikes, buffalo-hide painting and
lectures on tribal trade networks — insect repellent included. Her message:
"Come and meet the descendants of the people who provided shelter to Lewis
and Clark."
If the Mandan are as friendly today as they were 200 years ago, their
neighbors the Teton Sioux, who were ornery in their encounters with Lewis
and Clark, remain almost as testy. A South Dakota "scenic byway" designation
drew initial opposition on the Standing Rock reservation. Traditionalists
fear that tourists will loot sacred grave sites. And while the tribe is
seeking grants for roadside panels and interpretive centers, the message
will be mixed. "Our people have for too long put on beads and feathers and
danced for the white man," says Ronald McNeil, a great-great-great grandson
of Chief Sitting Bull and president of the local community college. "Yes,
we'll show how our ancestors lived when Lewis and Clark came up the trail.
But then we must say what happened to them since. I'm tired of playing
Indian and not getting to be an Indian."
With conflicting emotions running deep among the tribes, Lewis and Clark
boosters hope to bridge the divide by touting the expedition as "a journey
of mutual discovery." Their fear: that Indian protests will mar the
festivities, as happened during the 1992 Columbus voyage anniversary. "We're
not going to repeat the Columbus debacle," says Michelle Bussard, executive
director of the National Council of the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial. The
nonprofit group has assembled a 30-member Circle of Tribal Advisers to
promote Indian participation, and the National Park Service has chosen a
Mandan-Hidatsa, Gerard Baker, to be superintendent of the Lewis and Clark
National Historic Trail. His traveling exhibit, "Corps of Discovery II,"
will be "a tent of many voices," he says, focusing on native cultures and
their "hope for the future."
It's all very inclusive, but these aren't Disney Indians. "We're not
celebrating Lewis and Clark," says Tex Hall, president of the American
Congress of Indians, who is scheduled to speak at the January launch of the
commemoration at Monticello, in Charlottesville, Va. "Still, people are
making money on this, so don't leave out the Indians. It's an opportunity
for us to tell our story." And to revive cultures that are slipping away. In
Oregon, the Umatilla tribe, whose members told Clark they thought the
explorers were "supernatural and came down from the clouds," wants funds for
a language-immersion program, as only a handful of tribe members still speak
their native language fluently. And the tribe wants to publish an atlas of
its Columbia River homeland with more than 1,000 native place names, long
extinct.
For more than a century, the history of Lewis and Clark's encounters with
the 58 tribes along the trail has been defined by the white men's journals.
The Mandan, who fed them, danced with them and offered them sexual favors
over the bitterly cold winter of 1804-05, were described as good neighbors.
The Lemhi Shoshone, Lewis wrote, were "not only cheerful but even gay, fond
of gaudy dress ... generous with the little they possess, extreemly honest
... " He admired the Chinook for their canoes, "remarkably neat, light and
well adapted for riding high waves" but disparaged their "well-known
treachery."
Today Indians are looking to their own oral histories, as well as reading
between the lines of the journals, to re-interpret what happened. Says Ben
Sherman, president of the Western American Indian Chamber in Denver: "The
upcoming events portray Clark as the benevolent protector of Indians —
that's propagandist baloney." The tragic aftermath: as Governor of the
Missouri Territory and Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Clark presided over
President Thomas Jefferson's land-grab policy, which some historians
characterize as a direct cause of "cultural genocide" and "ethnic
cleansing."
In his journal, Lewis called the Blackfeet "a vicious lawless and reather
an abandoned set of wretches." But today's Blackfeet want no one to forget
that two of their warriors were killed in a skirmish sparked by Lewis' talk
of selling arms to rival tribes. "We knew, 'There goes the neighborhood,'"
says tribe member James Craven, a professor at Clark University in
Vancouver, Wash. Diplomatic blunders also fueled a confrontation with the
Teton Sioux, gatekeepers of the Missouri, whom Clark later called "the
vilest miscreants of the savage race." LaDonna Bravebull, a Standing Rock
tour guide, touts her ancestors' viewpoint as, "We're not taking your
trinkets and your great white father. I don't think so!"
Looking back, the Sioux had it right. Jefferson had told Lewis to inform
"those through whose country you will pass" that "henceforth we become their
fathers and friends, and that we shall endeavor that they shall have no
cause to lament the change." But whites brought diseases that killed as many
as 90% of some tribes' members. Most of the tribes Lewis and Clark
encountered were forced off the rivers that sustained their commerce and
culture and herded onto reservations with poor soil. Today a third of Native
Americans live below the poverty line, and half are unemployed.
The challenge for tribes is to share this history without inducing
compassion fatigue in the tourists they hope to attract. One thing that
unites Lewis and Clark enthusiasts and naysayers is the burgeoning revival
of Native American traditions. For visitors, tribal culture offers a glimpse
of the American past. For Indians, it is key to their survival as distinct
peoples. At the Boys and Girls Club on Fort Berthold Reservation in North
Dakota, the posters read tradition, not addiction. At an Indian Health
Service clinic in Mobridge, S.D., teenage methamphetamine users are
introduced to the sweat lodge. The Cheyenne River Sioux run a herd of more
than 2,000 buffalo and distribute meat to tribe members, while the Lower
Brule Sioux are planning a buffalo museum.
At Standing Rock, the combative past survives in surnames. On radio
station KLND — that's Lakota, Nakota, Dakota — the news is from Mike Kills
Pretty Enemy, the music from Virgil Taken Alive. Last month tribe members
gathered near the grave site of Sitting Bull, General George Custer's
conqueror, to pray at the graves of long-ago chiefs — Thunderhawk,
Rain-in-the-Face, Running Antelope. A package event for tourists? Hardly.
The Indians got there on horseback and camped in the cold. In fact, they
were not dressed for tourist camcorders. They wore jeans, permanent press
and wrap-around shades. When they set fire to a wad of sage, in a
purification ritual, it was in a Folger's coffee can. And the graveside
speeches touched on the plague of alcoholism and suicide among reservation
youth. "We want our children to be proud they are descendants of chiefs,"
says Sitting Bull kinsman McNeil. "So when they play cowboys and Indians,
they'll all want to be Indians."
Indian pride and Indian politics could complicate the Lewis and Clark
commemoration. In April when 130 tribal delegates gathered in Lewiston,
Idaho, under the auspices of the Lewis and Clark council, the tone veered
sharply off the official "reconciliation" trail. The group called on the
Federal Government to extend legal recognition to the Chinook, Clatsop and
Monacan tribes, noting "their pivotal role in the success of the
expedition." Recognition brings federal aid as well as sovereignty — and the
right to build casinos. Another resolution decried vandalism of sacred sites
and plundering of Indian graves as "acts of terrorism," adding that the
increase in Lewis and Clark visitors could result in "cultural resource
desecration [of] catastrophic proportions."
In recent years, Standing Rock's former historic-preservation officer,
Tim Mentz, reburied remains from 438 Indian graves that had been disturbed.
As federal officials have tinkered with the water levels of the Missouri
River, long-submerged Indian villages have resurfaced, luring robbers
seeking to profit from a black market in bones and artifacts. "We are not
archaeological specimens," says Mentz indignantly. Unfortunately his zeal
went too far for some tribal officials. Mentz was fired last May. His
offense: refusing to disinter hillside graves to make way for a road to the
reservation casino.
Many of those graves are Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara, village tribes that
lived along the Missouri in what is now Standing Rock, when the Sioux were
nomadic warriors. But with smallpox decimating their ranks, the Indian
farmers were herded north to Fort Berthold reservation. There they rebuilt
their villages, only to be displaced again in 1953 when Garrison Dam flooded
their rich bottomlands. If they see an opportunity in the Lewis and Clark
commemoration, it is because culture and economics are intertwined. The
image of Amy Mossett dressed up as Sacagawea graces North Dakota tourist
posters, but she says she isn't "playing Indian." And her teepee sleepovers
and earth-lodge exhibits are part of something more significant than
attracting tourist dollars.
Like more and more Native Americans, Mossett is reviving traditional
culture in her daily life. Three years ago she began cultivating a garden
with a tribal elder to replicate the ancient crops that Lewis and Clark once
enjoyed. "You can't buy Mandan blue corn flour in the grocery store," she
says. She is taking a course in porcupine-quill embroidery. And her teenage
daughters are studying the Hidatsa language in school. "Our tribes have
survived catastrophic events in the past 200 years," she says. "But if we
grieve forever, we will never move forward."
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